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Material Architecture

Material Architecture Emergent Materials for Innovative Buildings and Ecological Construction John Fernandez

AMSTERDAM • BOSTON • HEIDELBERG • LONDON • NEW YORK • OXFORD PARIS • SAN DIEGO • SAN FRANCISCO • SINGAPORE • SYDNEY • TOKYO Architectural Press is an imprint of Elsevier

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Architectural Press is an imprint of Elsevier Linacre House, Jordan Hill, Oxford OX2 8DP, UK 30 Corporate Drive, Suite 400, Burlington, MA 01803, USA First edition 2006 Reprinted 2006 Copyright © 2006, John Fernandez. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved The right of John Fernandez to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publisher Permissions may be sought directly from Elsevier’s Science & Technology Rights Department in Oxford, UK: phone (44) (0) 1865 843830; fax (44) (0) 1865 853333; email: [email protected]. Alternatively you can submit your request online by visiting the Elsevier web site at http://elsevier.com/locate/permissions, and selecting Obtaining permission to use Elsevier material Notice No responsibility is assumed by the publisher for any injury and/or damage to persons or property as a matter of products liability, negligence or otherwise, or from any use or operation of any methods, products, instructions or ideas contained in the material herein. Because of rapid advances in the medical sciences, in particular, independent verification of diagnoses and drug dosages should be made British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN–13: 978-0-7506-6497-4 ISBN–10: 0-7506-6497-5 For information on all Architectural Press publications visit our website at www.architecturalpress.com Printed and bound in Italy 06 07 08 09 10 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2

for my mother and father – in return for their many gifts

Contents Acknowledgements ix Prologue – Building Design 1 I

Time 1 Matters of Research 15 2 Time and Materials 31

II

Material 3 Material Families and Properties 75 3.1 Metals 109 3.2 Polymers 153 3.3 Ceramics 195 3.4 Composites 227 3.5 Biomaterials and Loam 245

III

Design 4 Material Selection 263 5 Material Assemblies 277

Epilogue – Building Ecologies 297 Bibliography 307 Index 331

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Prologue - Building Design

While the most fundamental goal of architecture - providing buildings to shelter human activities - is as pressing as ever, the balance between functional services and the intangibles of delight is constantly evolving. The Prologue explores these issues as they are related to the physical making of building systems in a contemporary material world.

I

Time

1

Matters of Research

2

Time and Materials

II

Material

3

Material Families and Properties

3.1

Metals

3.2

Polymers

3.3

Ceramics

3.4

Composites

3.5

Biomaterials and Loam

III

Design

4

Material Selection

5

Material Assemblies

Part I establishes the intellectual context for the remainder of the book by addressing architectural research and the emerging issues of ecological construction. Chapter 1 offers an outline of the historical background and disciplinary distinctions that have emerged from the changes that technology and academic institutions have prompted. Material flows, buildings lifetimes, designing for obsolescence and disassembly are discussed as an emerging understanding of the ecological and environmental ramifications of construction materials.

Beginning with an outline of material properties and families in Chapter 3, Part II is the technical heart of the book - presenting the five material families in detail. Sections 3.1-3.5 include historical and technical background for each material family, typical properties of those families, emerging new materials and implications for future architectural design. An introduction to the science of architectural materials including a survey of their use in building systems, a discussion of intrinsic and extrinsic material properties, and a detailed description of individual properties and the behavior of individual materials from the array of families. For Sections 3.1-3.5: properties, architectural applications and new materials. Ferrous and non-ferrous alloys. Thermoplastics, thermosets and elastomers. Concrete, fired clays, glasses and other ceramics. Glass, carbon, kevlar fiber reinforced polymers and other composites. Natural fibers, wood, earth and other materials of biological and geochemical origins.

Part III proposes that material selection methodologies and research can be brought to bear in the assessment and comparison of traditional and non-traditional architectural materials for better design. Multi-objective optimization is presented as a proven technique for making informed choices between the vast array of available materials for any design situation. Three research projects that merge design and technical matters are described.

Epilogue - Building Ecologies

An overview of the theories and methods of industrial ecology and the opportunities for incorporating this new science into an understanding of the paths that responsible construction make take for the future.

Acknowledgements As all writers inevitably become, I am now deeply indebted to many individuals for inspiration, constructive criticism, unwavering support and - most importantly - unconditional patience. The MIT Class of 1957 made this book possible with their generous support these past three years. Material Architecture is a direct result of their kind and generous gift and I am hopeful that my ambitions to contribute to the mending of the artificial rift between the technology and design of buildings will be well-received. Clare Hall provided the wonderful space and the University of Cambridge the perfect environment for thinking and writing. To my colleagues in the Building Technology Program here at MIT - who have been supportive of my work of the past five years and whose steady encouragement I have readily accepted - Leon Glicksman, Les Norford, Andrew Scott and, most recently, John Ochsendorf and Marilyne Anderson. Also, to those colleagues from other institutions whose conversations and collaborations I have enjoyed and benefited from greatly - Daniel Schodek, Mike Ashby, Koen Steemers, Charles Kibert, John Habraken and many others - thank you all. Also, it has been my pleasure and privilege to present a good portion of the contents of this book to the students in my Emergent Materials Workshop at MIT these past couple of years. For your contributions, I hope you will find this volume a useful collection of thoughts and information. And to my publishers, Architectural Press of Oxford, England, for allowing the freedom and granting complete acceptance to pursue the idea of this book as deeply as possible. Kisses forever to my children, Vita and Lorenzo, whose brave patience has regularly threatened to break my heart. And finally to my wife, Malvina, who is the only person to know how totally I have depended on her for completion of this work. Many years ago she suggested that the materials of architecture was a subject worth pursuing - the seed was planted then. More than anyone, I hope she finds this book worthy of the youthful aspirations that initiated these interests. ix

John Fernandez is an Associate Professor and registered Architect in the Department of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the USA. His work addresses the physical systems of contemporary buildings. He has most recently been involved in the study of construction ecology and the opportunities afforded by a comprehensive description of the material flows dedicated to the making of our built world.

Prologue

Building Design

The engineer and architect must go back to basic principles, must keep abreast with and consult the scientist for new knowledge, redevelop his judgment of the behavior of structures and acquire a new sense of form derived from design rather than piece together parts of convenient fabrication… His work will then be part of his age and will afford delight and service for his contemporaries. Louis Kahn, 1944

Material Works

T

o “afford delight and service” is an optimistic phrase that captures well the best aspirations for making buildings. In articulating this pair, Kahn

gives us a remarkably succinct statement of the ultimate goals of architecture. In doing so, he also enlivens a practice that concerns itself with the symbiotic linking of the pragmatic and the poetic - the technical and the intuitive - in the material works of our built environment. We are reminded of the articulation of the essential parts of architecture by Vitruvius; firmitatis and utilitatis define the service rendered by buildings and venustatis the delight, or grace, that results. The results of the linkage between service and delight Figure P.1

are readily apparent in our great spaces. Grand Central Terminal in New York City is alive with use

Morning rush hour at Grand Central Terminal in New York City, a grand civic space like no other for its intense service to the city and the region, performed within a constructed canopy of the heavens. Transportation buildings are particularly good examples of the nexus of functional and architectural relations.

everyday. This building serves the city, the region and

Grand Central Terminal, New York City, USA (1913).

mind’s eye of the city.

Whitney Warren, Architect.

the imagination of its commuters through its simplicity of form and the splendor of its scale. Like many great works of architecture, separating its function from its form is a reduction of its enduring presence, for only in its material reality does it become a landmark of our

1

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Buildings

that

a r c h i t e c t u r e

delight

their

users

endeavor

to

enhance daily routines and timeless built landscapes. Buildings that provide reliable service ensure the safe, comfortable, reliable and durable shelter needed to fulfill the basic requirements of our species. Achieving this pair of conditions through time has been the driving force behind much of architectural design and building construction. The balance between the two depends on the priorities of society and the flux of economic and cultural forces. These are often substantially modulated locally by the needs of the building type, its particular location, owner, users and many other factors specific to a particular time and place. Through the ages, the desire for delight in architecture and the constituent elements of that delight have continually evolved. The intricacies of revelatory spatial organization and volumetric elaboration, astounding qualities of light and the movement of air, fidelity to stylistic codes and ornament and the suggestive import of all kinds of material surfaces are only a few of the ways in which design has led to the making of some of the most extraordinary cultural artifacts ever conceived. The Alhambra, the Louvre, King’s College, Cambridge, Grand Central Terminal are among many thousands of buildings that extend their utility toward poetic expression. The elements of design used to achieve these extraordinary spaces have changed over time. The materials have changed as well. Buildings are meant to fulfill the diverse aspirations of a complex society. When delight and service are coupled together into a symbiotic whole, the built environment becomes a richly varied mosaic of design invention and engineering creativity achieved through the materials of the time. Today we are equally impressed by the lightness of a cable-stay structure as the Egyptians were by the solidity and intended permanence of their pyramids and tombs. Partly guiding these fascinations are

the

various

cultural

productions

that

have

contributed to the pluralism of contemporary aesthetics. 2

Figure P.2a, b Construction photographs showing window units produced with advanced CAD/CAM systems delivered to site and placed within the superstructure of the building (above) and elaborately curved structural steel framework of laboratory space. Stata Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts, USA (2004). Frank O. Gehry, Architect.

Prologue While aesthetics - that collection of codes, theories and manifestos that orbits the making of all kinds of forms - has become an esoteric subject verging on a quaint irrelevance, the underlying fascination that drives it persists. We are still taken aback by new forms and the evolving forces - technological and otherwise - that drive their conception. This evolution - the changing nature of delight - has been driven by many factors including cultural diversity and global economic interdependence, the increasingly fluid global exchange of information and images, structural changes to the knowledge and practices of design and construction and many technological changes, such as material innovations. Of course we also live in a time of frenetic expressive heterogeneity in which aesthetic codes have intermingled, mutated and spawned every kind of architectural proposition: occasionally simultaneously. It is this intermingling with technological Figure P.3 Supporting structure and panel arrays for photovoltaic cells serving simultaneously as solar shading, partial enclosure to an egress stair, major facade material and energy - producing vertical surface. This type of inventive construct, using elements that aspire to address emerging concerns - in this case the need and ability to tap into renewable energy sources - is one of the most exciting leading edges for contemporary architecture. Colorado Court, Multi-Unit Housing, Santa Monica, CA, USA (2003). Pugh + Scarpa Architecture.

discovery and invention that gives rise to the surprising forms of contemporary architecture. The continuing search for architectural form has always captivated the imagination and led to remarkable buildings and structures in every time period. From the first tall buildings in Chicago to Frei Otto’s tensile net surfaces in Munich to Santiago Calatrava’s bridges, novel form has a presence unmatched by any other physical objects produced by society. The technology of these objects can overwhelm and obscure their cultural and civic value and a mere fascination with technique can trivialize their contribution to design. Caution is wise when praising the technical over the lyrical because we know that trivializing and discounting the value of the character of form, the meaning of shapes and surfaces, colors and materials, inevitably leads to a process bankrupt in spirit and impotent in fully capturing the imagination. And yet, we know that technical changes have prompted many new design approaches, and surprisingly novel forms, in the making of large and complex buildings and elements of infrastructure. 3

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Figure P.4 Float glass treated with a spectrally selective metal oxide coating and aluminum extrusion mullions comprise a high performing building enclosure providing both daylighting and thermal comfort reliably. London, UK.

Similarly, the nature of service has also changed, evolved and progressed through time, especially during the industrial revolution and since the early 19th century. Despite the fact that our physiological needs, as a species, have not fundamentally changed over time, we do have greater expectations for higher comfort levels and the technologies used to satisfy them have evolved dramatically. The primary domain of these changes has been in the engineering of building systems required to support and deliver the acceptable performance of the building. We have come to expect a constancy and unfailing reliability over structural performance, precise control over the interior environment, predictability in the integrity of the building enclosure and a general level of performance from all other building systems at a level never before attempted, but now often realized and routinely expected. Contemporary buildings are safer than ever before. Structural engineering and standardized structural members, fire suppression technologies and alarm and communication capabilities, noncombustible materials and regulatory mandates of every kind have made contemporary buildings very safe and reliable. As a result, we now expect - especially in the developed west - a level of service never before achieved or sought after in the history of buildings. In the United States, with its multitude of contrasting climates, mechanically assisted ventilation and air conditioning can be found in most buildings and almost all commercial office buildings. Our contemporary airline terminals provide moving walkways to spirit harried passengers through their extensive corridors. Our buildings reliably serve us with steady supplies of light, water and air and now broadband streams of data. And yet, the haste with which buildings have fundamentally changed their systems and adopted the latest technologies has also led to notable problems. Indoor air quality, high energy consumption, unpredictable failures in durability, have all contributed to 4

Prologue

Figure P.5 An airport terminal - another example of a transportation building serving both functional and nonfunctional needs. In this era of frenetic travel these buildings have acquired a central place in the modern experience of millions of people. Bilbao Airport, Spain. Santiago Calatrava, Architect.

situations in which contemporary buildings have failed to improve people’s lives. An example of this is the commercial office building, particularly in the United States. Processed air, artificial lighting, acoustic monotony, the off-gassing of materials and the general environmental tedium of office interiors, while serving economic goals, cannot generally be considered an improvement in the lives of its users. These kinds of buildings serve narrow economic interests and ignore value that falls outside of the harsh criteria of corporate accounting. Many of the problems of these buildings have arisen by virtue of the fact that the inclusion of seemingly beneficial new technologies (in any situation) is almost always accompanied by unforeseen negative consequences (Tenner 1997). However, the constant refinement of service continues and the balance between it and the priorities to enhance the well-being of people is in constant negotiation. Some change has been beneficial - some not. The very basis of a humane and appropriate architecture is the impassioned search for materials and methods to achieve an optimal mix of delight and service. This is why there is no real separation between technique and form - technique and design. Understandably, it is sometimes necessary to emphasize one concern over another, delight over service or otherwise, for the benefit of advancing architecture generally. The discourse that is necessary in pursuing this negotiation for the benefit of a humane built environment is a pluralistic endeavor born of the diversity and scope of the architectural mission. Topics both technical and nontechnical bear the weight of a contemporary mission to serve and delight in ways that both belong to and transcend our times. Architectural design is irreversibly stitched together by the desire for enhanced delight and the search for better service to occupants. So, it is not surprising that this pair of interests, forming as they do the foundation of design, has co-evolved over time (Basalla 1988). This evolving balance has been the hallmark of 5

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3000 construction materials

2500

Million tons

2000 1500 1000

industrial materials

500 agriculture and forestry 0 1900

1910

1920

1930

1940

Figure P.6

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

Year

Materials use for construction, industrial, agriculture and forestry in the United States between 1900 and 2000. Source: Matos and Wagner, USGS.

the transaction between engineering and architecture; between analytical examination and design synthesis (Daniels 1997,1998). Technological advances inevitably alter the path for design and continually supply new and unanticipated opportunities for architectural form - as the changing nature of the material world has been a prime source of new opportunities for design (Timberlake 2001). Material Ecology Using contemporary materials in the best possible ways involves both technical understanding and design invention. It is reasonable to suppose that enhancing the knowledge of materials, traditional and novel, will improve the ability of designers to better respond to contemporary needs and produce a more humane built environment that also serves the contemporary imagination. Today, improving the environment requires a reconsideration of the contribution of new materials in this process. One such issue is the relationship between the production and consumption of materials and the service lifetimes of buildings. The material reality of typical buildings is not the static and unchanging permanence that monumental architecture aspires to. Yet, buildings do constitute an enormous store of materials used in construction - primarily due to their long lives. Understanding and designing within an organized ecology of the built environment, and not just for a single project’s needs, requires more information about the material flows for construction. Therefore, the ecology of the built environment becomes one aspect of the study of materials for buildings. Buildings are among the very largest and most complex artifacts that our species has ever produced. The sheer size, weight and volume of many buildings are far larger than the 6

Prologue reclaimed and recycled materials regional space

anthropogenic stock

renewable materials

nonrenewable materials

Figure P.7

controlled wastes city 1

city 2

city 3 uncontrolled wastes (environmental dissipation) reclaimed and recycled materials

A simplified diagram of material flows devoted to contemporary construction within a regional spatial boundary during a period of one year. Cities are the primary beneficiaries of the anthropogenic stock that is comprised of all existing buildings. Source: Based on various diagrams from a variety of industrial ecology sources, see Graedel, Kibert, Ayres, Bringezu among others.

vast majority of other modern industrial artifacts. The construction of these buildings, their long lives and their aggregation into enormous cities has permanently altered the earth’s landscape. The modern city is the largest accumulation of materials and harnessed energy ever assembled. It is estimated that our cities, past and present, existing and dissolved have together consumed and retained upwards of 75 percent of all materials ever extracted by humans. This anthropogenic stock is now the material legacy left to us by all previous generations, Figure P.7. The enterprise of organizing materials into our buildings and cities has been the historical responsibility of construction technique and, recently, building technology. The history of that technology and the continuing story of its developments are critical aspects of the legacy left to us by the act of building. Material Intuitions and the Intellectual Dangers of Materiality The emergence of novel technologies has always held a central place in the creative efforts of designers (Auer 1995;Beukers 1998;Cornish 1987;Gregotti 1996). The materials of architecture have always been pivotal in the development of its form and the implication of future form. Ancient concrete and masonry construction, Gothic stonework, the standardized steel bar joists of modern buildings, the reinforced concrete of bridges and tall buildings have shaped the direction of design and the production of novel forms of architecture. Whether experiments in materials yield successful buildings is still dependent on the individuals involved and the rigor of the effort. As in any field of technology, the development of technologies for buildings has been littered with false starts. And yet, some of the primary developments in architectural form have been prompted by the introduction of new materials 7

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(Cowan and Smith 1988; Schwartz 1996; Turner 1986). The reinforced concrete frames of Auguste Perret’s Theatre

des

Champes-Elysees

(Paris,

1911-13),

LeCorbusier’s Dom-ino (1914-15) and Albert Kahn’s Ford Motor Company Factory (Highland Park, Michigan, 1909), are among the very many that have initiated the novel forms of a new architecture. Regulating these developments are the assemblies that comprise contemporary buildings. These building systems have been segregated into several discrete and interdependent assemblies, each with its own set of performance requirements, lifecyles, maintenance needs,

replacement

protocols

and

specialized

professionals, engineers and others to design, construct and maintain them. As a result, the materials used to fulfill the range of performance requirements of the foundation, superstructure, building services (HVAC, lighting, plumbing and others), exterior envelope, interior furnishings and other systems has become widely diverse (Wigginton 2002). Every material class is represented in most building systems, see Chapter 3 Material Families and Properties. Through rapid advances in a wide variety of materials for many industries, including construction, the question of the nature of these materials has continued to provoke commentary from practitioners and theorists alike (DiTomas 1996). This questioning has supported a provocative engagement with architectural materials and placed the facts of these materials at the center of the inventive moment. The properties of architectural materials have been mingled with the traditions of building construction resulting in a discourse of the tectonics of assemblies (Groak 1992;Frampton 1995,1999). Also, from time to time, the question of the use of materials in the design project has been framed in terms of a true “nature of materials” (LeCorbusier 1931). Architects have, in the past, repeatedly stated their 8

Figure P.8 Stone facade detail that clearly demonstrates the “particulate” nature of many ceramics that results in relatively high porosities. London, UK.

Prologue own views on the appropriate use of certain materials in terms of their generalized properties. Whether a material has a grain, or originates from inorganic or organic sources, is highly processed or relatively untouched - this is the language of a good deal of the discourse that attempts to formulate the nature of materials in architectural assemblies. While these views have achieved certain positive results that focus on the integrity of purpose and a heightened sensibility for the physical presence of architectural forms, they are not generally robust to the point of promoting an inventive interaction with materials. The danger in the adoption of subjective viewpoints over all other concerns lies in attempting to perceive a nature of materials primarily through visual (and some other sensory) experience. Textural qualities tend to obscure, or at least diminish, the importance of material properties. The selection and use of materials too often becomes an exercise in two-dimensional composition, based on a generally uninformed set of notions about the unique attributes of those materials. However, it is not reasonable to assume that quantitative knowledge of properties can fully engage a designer in defining the nature of the materials used for an architectural assembly. Computational methods for selection, while powerful tools underutilized by designers, can only augment a broader exposure to the qualities of materials for construction. It is necessary to enliven this analytical knowledge with the messy process of construction, the multi-sensory familiarity of personal contact within the context of the synthetic process of design. For example, it is inconceivable that Eladio Dieste would Figure P.9

have been able to conceptualize his reinforced masonry structures without a tactile, personal connection to the

Concrete surface detail showing the numerous “micropores” in what seems, at arm’s length, a very smooth surface.

material of brick, mortar and steel tensioning. It is equally

Los Angeles Cathedral, CA, USA. Rafael Moneo Architects.

with the same subtlety of detail and complexity of form in

difficult to believe that Felix Candela would have been able to form concrete and find the proper shell geometry

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his buildings had he not been a contractor responsible for the construction of a number of his own designs. A mere familiarity with the properties of materials is only enough to inform one of the ways in which to assess discrete behaviors of that material under restricted conditions. The hint of the full range of creative possibilities in any design situation cannot reasonably be perceived through a mere listing of the mechanical and physical properties alone. And while it may seem that a certain inevitability determines certain inventions in form and material, especially those born of deep experience and substantial technical knowledge, it is not useful to simply advocate that a material has a “nature” all its own, prescriptive of a limited set of forms. The physical and mechanical properties that describe a material are not intended, and do not have the capacity, to be a reductive plan for a limited number of predetermined forms that arise with the use of that particular material, see Chapter 4 Material Selection. And besides, the state of architecture today precludes such moral judgments about any “right” way to use materials. While sustainable design advocates may argue this point, it is still irrefutable that overwhelming plurality is the nature of our contemporary world. An intractable and singular position denies the overwhelming richness of contemporary design and negates the undeniable fact of the need to optimize a selection of material for any particular use, because there is no such thing as the perfect material for any particular application. Therefore, design intention and the material world coexist as an animated assertion of possibilities made physical. Designers understand that a fundamental step in design involves the translation of intention into material form. This critical leap requires the optimization and selection of materials that can satisfy the needs and desires that the designer has formulated. While intuition is central to this effort, technical knowledge is absolutely necessary. And today, with more material choices available than ever, this process has become a monumental challenge of data management. One reaction to this challenge has been the formulation of an alternative “soft narrative” of materials. A keystone of this self-compromised discourse is the use of the word “materiality”; a term that has gained a stubborn foothold in schools of architecture and come to encapsulate all too well the many indistinct notions of the physical “character” of a design proposal. Not surprisingly absent from inclusion in the Oxford English Dictionary, the word has persisted and spread like a mild cold, not enough to cause fatal illness, but enough to muddle the mind (Mori 2002). The notions that seem to constitute the materiality of an entity are often limited to the narrow goal of a heightened sensibility toward the use of materials within an architectural context, that is, the applied material qualities of a thing. Implicit in the general character of the word is the fact that a significant swath of contemporary designers are not able to discuss a material in terms that extend beyond the general and immediately sensory-oriented. The haptic and visual aspects of materials clearly dominate discussions of materiality and while these discussions 10

Prologue may be rich, useful and inspirational, they are limited in the coverage of the topic in light of its potential. The disciplines of materials science and engineering can add to this discussion - not to overtake or subsume in the specter of determinism or reductive analysis but by strategically contributing facts, data, sets of values, that may lead to an inventive idea. The broad use of the word materiality is an indication of the need for a simple effort of augmenting the general knowledge platform from which architects may launch design proposals. Without this effort, overly general discussions will continue to prevail and design innovation will suffer. And yet, it is almost needless to point out that the effort to yield truly innovative forms and spaces can only be achieved if the design process involves knowledge offered by the sciences and engineering of mechanics, materials and structures (Elliot 1992). These disciplines are an entry into another kind of invention. Through this dynamic it is not unreasonable to think that we may be on the cusp of a new age of design in which an energetic contemporary craft of new and old materials may play a central role. For example, it is now estimated that the average time necessary for a new construction material or system to proceed from laboratory success to production and distribution by the building construction industry in the United States is 17 years. This is a much slower process of invention and diffusion of innovation than comparably sized industries. In fact, it is widely believed that construction is the slowest of all industries of such scale in implementing proven, scientifically sound technological innovation. While this pace is understandable in terms of the certification necessary for ensuring the safety and health of the occupants of buildings using new materials and systems, it is surprising to know that it is generally easier to introduce a new material into the human body by way of biomedical engineering than it is to introduce a new material into buildings. The reasons for this include the decentralized nature of the US construction industry, the relative paucity of research funding, the conservative nature of the building trades, the extreme pressure on least cost solutions and a general set of cultural ideals that have consistently undervalued the more subtle aspects of architectural invention. However, the reasons run deeper than these observations imply. There exist deep cultural reasons for the discrepancy between technological innovation in the United States and comparisons with Western Europe, for example. The differences - in sensitivity to environmental issues, workplace quality, materials and energy resource management - point to a fundamental divergence in underlying values. The construction of architectural form and material innovation are necessarily no less distanced from these values and ideologies of society than any other large-scale enterprise. Therefore, efforts to investigate materials should be set within a well-conceived notion of the interests and goals of society. The amount of construction material consumed in the US alone should be considered reason enough to support and carefully evaluate innovations in construction technologies. In any case, the ubiquity of discussions of “materiality” speaks to a pressing need for a more complete understanding of materials and their properties. Doing so is not difficult. Ideally, this effort 11

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Figure P.10 Metals, especially ferrous alloys, are used in high stress applications in both tension and compression. Approximately 50 times more steel is needed to resist compression than is required to sustain the same stress in tension. The Louvre, Paris, France, IM Pei Architect.

should originate from within architecture as the best way in which to place the specialized knowledge of materials immediately within the context of architectural design. Becoming Familiar: A Personal Clause Therefore, the central premise of this book is that becoming familiar with new materials is a richly promising avenue in the continuous search for architectural form. In particular, engaging those materials that have been developed through the workings of industry, science and society over the past decades is a worthwhile effort for designers wishing to improve the built environment - a central goal of this book. However, several points should be emphasized here. First, this book should not be seen as another attempt to distill an essential meaning from materials themselves. The desire to do so would be unappealing to this author and simply an incorrect use of the book. I contend here that meaning springs from human constructions focused on thoughtful and humane values and the spirit of the creative moment - intuitive, rational, irrational, associative and informed, all at the same time. A mere search for meaning in the vagueness of an “essence of materials” is not the intent here. Therefore, it should be clear that I do not intend to present a book to the design community that places value on the nature of material itself. This would, again, lead to a naive fetishism - just another aesthetic obsession with the technical. Conversely, it is in a material’s use that value is struck and intention is fulfilled - that is, transformation toward meaning from lowly material to humane buildings is achieved through the action of deep values (Calvino 1988;Manzini 1989; Pallasmaa 1994).

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Figure P.11 Ceramics are generally limited to low stress applications in compression only. Most ceramics are not recommended to carry tensile loads because of the nature of their failure mode - sudden and catastrophic. Bedell Mills Residence, Fernandez Lampietti Architects.

Second, the offering of information in the following chapters and the description of methods, primarily for materials selection, is not meant to preclude the most important process of learning about materials by the designer. Actual physical, tactile contact, cannot be replaced by the numerous graphs, tabular listing of properties, photographs or any other medium meant to contribute - but certainly not replace - a deeply intuitive sense of the behavior and presence of a material. The contemporary architect needs to step outside of the office often and visit manufacturers, assemblers, workshops and other sites of material manipulation. There are too few examples of real interaction between designers and material experts. For illustration here, I am drawn to a description given by Billie Tsien and Tod Williams regarding the casting of the bronze panels that cover the 53rd Street facade of the American Folk Art Museum in New York City. In discovering the opportunities and the limitations of casting various bronze alloys, the two architects engaged in a timeless shaping of design ideas through a material experience. The building facade benefited greatly from their trials. I also offer this example because I want to stress the fact that I am not advocating the creation of technophiles either. Williams and Tsien could never be accused of that, and yet they are adventurous and enthusiastic designers that challenge the filtered and marketed information about materials that most architects settle for (Pearson 2001). Third, the motivation behind the writing of this book is quite simple. I believe that a design community, better informed about materials, can produce a vastly improved built environment. The aspiration is simple. To deliver on this aspiration, the range of knowledge necessary for real change is vast and, currently, wildly decentralized and widely dispersed. In its barest outline, the knowledge base requires information of material properties and processing technologies as well as knowledge of the characteristics and performance mandates of contemporary building systems. Today it is also critical for designers to be eminently informed 13

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about the environmental and resource consequences of their decisions. Linking knowledge of material properties, requirements of building systems and ecological ramifications of resource use will foster a design ethic that is appropriate to the times in which we live. Large portions of this book attempt to improve the depth of knowledge of materials available to the designer by centralizing this information and making it relevant to the needs and desires of architects and students of a better architecture. Fourth, while it may strike the reader as stridently dogmatic, this book is not about materials. I am not a material scientist or engineer. I am an architect and this is a book about architecture - material architecture. The relationship between traditional and nontraditional materials and the processes and aspirations of design and construction are central to every section of this book. This is the reason that each chapter begins in a “discursive” style, outlining the historical, cultural, social and environmental topics to examine in the use of materials for contemporary buildings. A primary motivation in writing this book is the belief that architects should be making more of the knowledge that is available, both technical and nontechnical and fusing this knowledge with our own expertise in fulfilling the aspirations of society in the making of vast and complex systems for inhabitation. Writing about the systems of architecture necessarily involves addressing the materials of those systems. I believe there is general resignation in design communities to the prospect of gaining useful technical knowledge of new materials - so much so that important opportunities are being lost. But, I also believe in the adaptability and intelligence of the contemporary architect - especially the younger generation. This book is not beyond the realm of understanding of interested students and practitioners - and it is in this spirit that I offer it. Finally, the writing of this book works against the notion that a mere fascination with the materials of today is satisfactory, or even responsible. Obsession without knowledge makes unimportant, misguided and sometimes dangerous buildings. I strongly believe that a simple allure of contemporary materials is not only superficial at best but, in light of the enormous material expenditure of construction, critically irresponsible at worst. Equally, I hold to the ideal that technical knowledge of contemporary materials without a foundation of values to guide a passionate viewpoint for design is no better. Materials, in and of themselves - however novel - will never make us better designers. Therefore, if you are strictly interested in reading about the properties of materials, it is best to consult a book written by a scientist or engineer of materials. If, on the other hand, you are interested in reading about materials that can be employed in the ongoing evolution of humane, optimistic and spirited design, then I sincerely hope this book is in some way useful to you.

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Matters of Research

The greatest invention of the 19th century was the invention of the method of invention.

Alfred North Whitehead, 1925

Gated Communities

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echnical innovation comes by way of the accepted procedures of science-based engineering, and no small measure of creative thought. The

“invention of the method of invention” has fundamentally changed the nature of the relationship between the contemporary designer and the materials of architecture - as it has affected every other intellectual discipline of inquiry, research and development. Formulating a hypothesis, organizing a research plan, articulating a new viewpoint, advocating for a shift in perspective requiring further work and engaging with a community Figure 1.1 Tensile test setup for a structural fabric laminated glass sample proposed for a new kind of curtainwall assembly (see Chapter 5 for full explanation). While the testing of many materials for the purpose of establishing definitive values for all mechanical and physical properties has been substantially completed, the testing of original assemblies new configurations of components - will never be complete as long as inventive and novel ideas spring forth from the architecture and engineering disciplines. Building Technology Program, MIT. Principal investigator: author.

of interested individuals through the dissemination of results constitute the basic conditions for innovative work - the method of invention (Bernal 1954;Kuhn 1962;Latour and Woolgar 1986;Latour 1987). Critical to this enterprise, for any discipline that supports a serious research community, is the effort of communicating with others engaged in similar pursuits. The nature of the distribution of information in research has changed a great deal over the ages because the nature of research has changed. From the lone inventor-gentleman in England and France of the 18th century to the richly subsidized laboratories 15

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of today’s multi-national corporations and research universities, the breadth and depth of technical inquiry has greatly increased. As a result, the proliferation of means of communication - peer-reviewed journals, web-based collaborations, conferences and symposia - has responded to the enormous explosion of output from these research engines. Specialization has driven communities of expertise toward the refinement of research methods that produce strict delineations between a proliferation of subdisciplines. These intellectual “gated communities” of distinct core competencies characterize the landscape of research today. Research in architecture and its array of associated disciplines have also changed dramatically from the time of the emerging manufacturing and technical production of the industrial revolution to the current firewall between much of technology research and design work. The shifts in its modes for communication - also journal and periodical based, web-based and spawning numerous specialized gatherings - have reflected the larger changes in research. Many of the changes reflect the intensity of specialization that

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architecture schools everywhere. No less assertive are distinctions made in architectural practices in which designers and technical staff may work together but understand the subdisciplinary delineation of their roles. Clear and strong divisions between design and technology (and, by the way, criticism, history and visual studies and others) have resulted in both productive and debilitating shifts away from the generalist center of design. In some contexts this has created the disciplinary equivalent of “gated communities”. The establishment of a separate camp further and further away from the most energetic discourses of design is arguably most pronounced in the architectural (or building) technologies. On the one hand, specialization 16

Figure 1.2 Barker Library at MIT is the repository for the dozens of peer-reviewed journals used to assess advances in the areas of materials, civil engineering, computer science and many other science and engineering fields.

Chapter 1 of and within the building sciences has provided society with a much deeper understanding of the mechanics of all manner of phenomena related to the behavior of buildings. From the study of structures, strength of materials, energy flows, the physics of light and many other “practical” matters, we have come to be in much greater control of our buildings and, therefore, expect much higher levels of service than in the past. These scientific and engineering-based studies have delivered the tools and methods for engineering and constructing safer, more comfortable, more reliable buildings in greater numbers than ever before. Conversely, the intensity for specialization has fueled the enduring tendency for a growing segregation of technologies from design. While many notable exceptions to this trend can be easily invoked (the work of Santiago Calatrava, integrated design at Ove Arup and Partners, the work of a number of European architects, and a number of schools that consciously work against distinctions) globally the trend is readily discernible. That is, the diffusion of technologies away from the generalist and synthetic center of design has resulted in distinct and mutually exclusive groupings of researchers whose primary allegiance is no longer architecture per se, but a specific technology of building. The modes of communication used by this group closely reflects the science and engineering heritage of the subdiscipline. Peer-reviewed journals act as the vehicle of communication as they do for all the sciences and engineering fields. This contrasts greatly with much of the communication that is carried out by architects, through the publication of built work, essays and other writings in reviewed and non-reviewed periodicals, magazines Figure 1.3 Rotch Library, Department of Architecture, MIT, showing a selection of the periodicals that constitute the primary vehicle for international communication in design.

and trade journals. The cultural distinction between the building sciences and the design field is also reflected in the work spaces used by these two populations. For the most part, the building technologies model their spaces after those in engineering. In contrast, the architects still retain a spatial organization more akin to 17

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Figure 1.4 The Building Technology Program graduate student space at MIT. This is the type of space in which much of the research conducted in building technology today is accomplished. The tools are computational, the media electronic, communication is web-enabled and the space is closely related to those in engineering. Desks are tightly arranged and suffice for the generally quantitative and analytical work accomplished here.

the work studios of the fine arts than to any office or lab environment. As a reflection of the self-identity of these two distinct intellectual cultures, their spaces of work speak volumes of their aspirations, beliefs and interests. This trend, of specialization and segregation, has been noted many times (Watson 1997;Allen 2004). Why is it important to raise here? Have we not benefited more from the creation of productive satellites of specialization while maintaining the very high expectations for architectural design that characterizes construction globally? It is not the intention of this book to address these questions in a general way. This first chapter traces key shifts in the modes of research and communication in architecture and other disciplines for the dual purpose of offering the background to our current state of affairs and demystifying the path back to a more integrated practice of architecture. The Built Word The written word has always been used to advance communication and advocacy in the design arts. Since the beginning of the coordinated enterprise of construction, expert knowledge of building materials and supporting technologies have been conveyed from one cultural context to the next - often through the written and printed word. Transfer through time, across geographic and societal boundaries and from knowledgeable practitioners to novices in building construction, has accelerated with improved methods for disseminating the myriad types of technical advances generated within the last several centuries. A variety of media has facilitated this transfer. Among many methods employed through the ages, the buildings themselves have been primary artifacts along with architectural treatises, published papers and a continuing legacy of the instruction in craft and trade skills.

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Figure 1.5 The Department of Architecture design studio spaces. The enduring spatial configuration, while transformed somewhat by the use of computers, attests to the commitment of educators to continue the legacy of the atelier environment. Work tables are suitable for the messiness of model-making, sketching and other media and the space closely relates to studio spaces in the fine arts.

While innovation in construction has always been, and to some extent continues to be, the result of the local confluence of a great diversity of economic, technological and cultural forces, the context for that innovation, and its mode of dissemination, has steadily shifted from a synthesis of architectural priorities and proven techniques to a process of increasing intellectual specialization within separately guided scientific disciplines. Beginning in the mid18th century, the locus of innovation in construction and building crafts slowly began to shift from the trade guilds, craft workshops and construction site itself to the nascent production plant of the industrial revolution, and later the corporate-sponsored scientific laboratory (Frampton 1996). Also, with the rapid growth of the European city, the responsibility for building began to rest with specialists - the early contractors (Heyman 2002). For the first time, the process of the development of materials for construction was displaced to entities - the research laboratory and industrial production facility - whose primary modes of investigation are regulated, not by the multifaceted discourse of architectural thought and construction logic, but by newly emerged procedures of the scientific method and industrial capacities organized according to their own logic and needs. ...what, if any, is the organizational influence of technique upon a specific work of art? In other words, how important is professional skill and its specific use for a defined aim; but also how much does it matter that technique is a means toward something else, and at the same time carries the significance of its own history as an instrument? And finally, what place does the question of technique (by no means a technical problem) occupy in the process of forming a work? Naturally, all this began when distinctions were drawn between practical and conceptual action, between heights of ability and depths of reflection, which in the ancient world were united in the concept of technē. (Gregotti 1996)

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The advances of architectural technologies, as a particular body of technical and design knowledge, have also been transmitted through the ages in a great variety of ways. These methods have also changed dramatically over time and continue to evolve and the type of communication media used has been very much related to the type of architecture in question. Knowledge of the architecture of the ruling classes and governing institutions has always traveled through privileged conduits; published treatises, monographs, pamphlets, paintings, sketches and measured drawings. Knowledge of vernacular, popular and regionally distinctive architecture, especially that of residential and agrarian buildings of the feudal, agrarian and working classes, has been transferred by the multifarious workings of tradition. Early in the development of construction technologies and throughout the pre-industrial world, buildings themselves played the dominant role in exemplifying accepted practice and transmitting techniques to a select design audience (Fitchen 1994;Mark 1993). Throughout the ancient world, into the medieval period and the Renaissance and continuing through the industrial revolution, the most widely recognized buildings were most instrumental in providing knowledge of architectural technologies to successive generations of engineers and architects. During those periods, the master mason, the builder, and the architect were most indebted to the knowledge gained from previous built work (King 2000). And yet publications dating back to ancient Rome have also played a role in teaching, proselytizing and attempting to persuade interested individuals of the benefits of a particular point of view. Both design philosophies and construction directives have been the subjects of these publications. Augmenting the buildings as primary sources for architectural thinking, the architectural treatise and associated publications have played an important role in documenting advances in construction technique, codifying best practice and disseminating findings geographically and temporally. Beginning with Vitruvius, the techniques of construction and the properties of building materials have been an important component of architectural learning - included in the same volumes that discussed mathematical proportion and aesthetic ideals, city planning, infrastructure placement, military fortifications and many other “buildingrelated” topics (Vitruvius 1999a,b). For example, while venturing far beyond mere construction topics in his famous books, Vitruvius stressed the importance of understanding the relevant physical properties of the primary materials of construction as a fundamental aspect of the act of building. Hence I believe it right to treat of the diversity and practical peculiarities of these things as well as of the qualities which they exhibit in buildings, so that persons who are intending to build may understand them and so make no mistake, but may gather materials which are suitable to use in their buildings. (Vitruvius, Granger 1999a)

The treatise, through much of history, was engaged in presenting a more or less complete picture of the discipline of architecture; design principles and building techniques. The topics 20

Chapter 1 typically addressed included technical discussions of methods of construction, strategies for good practice on the construction site, descriptions of useful material properties and many other facts regarding the process of realizing a building. However, the technical information gathered within these documents spoke to a set of generalized and descriptive relations rather than results gathered from empirical studies of the kind that characterize modern science. The relations illustrated within treatises produced before the 18th century did not contain the kinds of investigations that would characterize the scientific revolution of Galileo and Copernicus and the regulated process of the scientific method. Therefore, early treatments of the technology of construction were presented as a set of relations based in “common sense”, construction experience and rules of beauty or notions of propriety. Only later, and through the eventual proliferation of specialized publications, did the science of building and construction emerge. The writings of Alberti, Palladio, Carlo Fontana and others demonstrate the character of the treatment of construction issues quite well (Palladio 1570). For example, Fontana, writing in 1694 (Fontana 1694), addressed problems in the cracking of St. Peter’s dome through a postulation of solutions that used geometric relations to establish the requisite needs of solidity (Perez-Gomez 1994). Fontana used this rationale for uncovering divine relations in the physical construct and design conception of the church. Alberti, also intent on providing useful information on building includes diagrams of typical masonry wall construction, timber details and other mundane construction details as well as suggestions on construction that depend quite a lot on common sense, or at least reasonable conclusions. The ancients used to say, “Dig until you reach solid ground, and God be with you.” (Alberti 1550)

And while the 18th century was to bring a revolution in the nature of technical knowledge and the methods of investigation, the descriptive treatise was to survive through many centuries, not as a more integrative document of design and technology but as a statement of architectural design motivation and intention. Technical communication began to be pursued elsewhere. For example, in the early 18th century, parallel to advances in science, several efforts were under way to inaugurate a newly revived renaissance sensibility in architecture quite apart from the technological advances of the day. Writing in his Vitruvius Britannicus, Colen Campbell (1676-1729) argued the right of British architecture to assume the mantle of the ancient and renaissance orders (Campbell 1967). He raised Indigo Jones to the position of rightful heir to the perfection of Palladio’s architecture. This kind of treatise has come to typify what we know of today as architectural writing. In fact, the writings of architects today strongly continue to argue for the legitimacy of particular forms and design approaches primarily based on nontechnical issues. During the passage of centuries, one type of knowledge did not fully succumb to another; while science was developing its own methods and beginning to publish findings, the architectural treatise did not lose its power to establish artistic authority.

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However, individual thinkers and vanguard scientists of the time were initiating an irreversible germination of principles based on observation and experimentation. During the early 18th century discoveries made of the strength of materials began to find their way into scientific papers and a selection of architectural treatises. These discoveries, while still presented very much in the tradition of Vitruvius, Alberti and Palladio, used a nascent scientific method and newly developed empirical strategies for reaching conclusions directed toward rapid introduction into engineering and architectural applications. These efforts were fundamentally influenced by the mathematical formulations brought to the study of the strength of materials and statics by Galileo. While the direction was a productive one, it would be some time before the most fundamental problems in statics and strength of materials were to be solved. Eventually novel solutions surfaced to replace the “pronounced failure in the normal problemsolving activity” of predicting the performance of structural elements (Kuhn 1962). The intent of these writings was still clearly toward augmenting the tools available to builders in achieving physical constructs. The methods used to reach these conclusions were of a very different kind than ever used before, that of the construction of a world fully described in terms of abstract geometry and numerical quanta. As a clear shift toward scientific principles, Gautier of the newly formed Corps des Ponts et Chausees published a treatise on bridges during the first third of the 18th century. His Traité (Gautier 1727) went so far as to advocate that architecture was founded on principles of mechanics and empirically determined strength of materials. His eclipse of previous methods for establishing the “correct” proportions of individual structural members helped to bring forward the idea that form was dependent on physical phenomena rather than “rules” of ideal proportion or beauty. That is, the description of architecture, both as a process of production and the embodiment of physical proportional perfection was achieved through a treatment of subjects as varied as mathematical constants of the ancient orders and specific recommendations on the processing, placement and finishing of building materials. For many centuries, the discussion of architecture could not be considered in terms in which this synthesis was not referred to. While this clearly led to extraordinary results, especially in terms of advances reached through a combination of construction experience as well as an enhanced intuition aided by the learning that comes from a first-hand knowledge of the properties of building materials, it could not advance a generalized understanding of the forces that contributed to the performance of buildings through their individual components. It would take a search of several centuries, beginning with Galileo’s attempts to mathematically describe the essential elements of statics and the strength of materials, to arrive at the beginnings of a concerted effort to understand the underlying forces affecting architectural components (Heyman 1998;Timoshenko 1953).

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Chapter 1 An Industrial (not Technological) Revolution It is useful to remind oneself that since the very beginnings of human existence, technology - as a measure of the human ability to configure tools and develop processes - has always assisted our daily activities. Science has not. Science is only the relatively new result of formulations of methods and conclusions reached through the application of the scientific method. Also, it is important to note that the industrial revolution was a revolution for society, industry and national economies but not a revolution, in the true sense of that word, for technology or science. Contrary to popular understanding, the scientific and technological progress of that time was clearly incremental (Basalla 1988). Improvements in machinery design, the harnessing of useful work from energy with the development of the steam and internal combustion engines, the rise of organic chemistry, the invention of electric lighting and communications, all contributed to revolutionary social changes through incremental scientific and technological advances. Likewise, massive shifts away from the traditional fuels of wood, other biomass, wind and water power and towards coal and, eventually, oil and other fossil fuels radically changed the nature of production and industry output. As a result, during the industrial revolution the manufacture of architectural materials and components (and most other physical implements) was transferred from the agrarian setting of the nonindustrial countryside and the artisanal workshop of the skilled craftsman to workplaces of the urban factory filled with legions of hired low-skilled workers displaced from that same countryside (McClellan and Dorn 1999). Above all else, the industrial revolution was an expansion of manufacturing capacity, a dramatic increase in industrial productivity and a proliferation of incremental technical advances for the purpose of meeting the demands of a surging population. The real revolution lay in the transfer of productive capacity from the fields to the factories as an absolutely necessary condition to feed and clothe a great deal more people than ever before. As a result of better hygiene and more productive agricultural practices European populations were exploding; in England alone, the population grew from 2 to 9 million between the middle of the 15th century to the end of the 18th. During that same time energy consumption per capita increased by a factor of ten. Between 1830 and 1870, coal production increased from 24 to 110 million tons and iron production from 70,000 to 4 million tons. During that same time, worker production also doubled (McClellan and Dorn 1999;Stearns 1993). While a social revolution was displacing centers of production and expanding industrial capacities through the centralization of manufacturing facilities, the contributions by scientists and technologists were incremental and slow. However, the contributions of Mariotte, Musschonbrek, Gautier, Soufflot and later Perronet and others brought architectural technologies, especially those concerned with statics and the strength of materials, toward consensus for efficient form and use of materials. Before the work of these individuals, the truths inherent in geometric relations – defined as originating in notions of both correct form 23

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and divine representation – dominated the work of leading architects and engineers. As a result of a reconsideration of the deterministic import of geometry, and a newly gained set of empirical and theoretical tools, the forms of architecture were now to be substantially influenced by a growing articulation of physical principles. Culminating in the presentation, to the Royal Academy of Science, of Charles-Auguste Coulomb’s paper “On the Application of the Rules of Maximums and Minimums to Some Problems of Statics Relative to Architecture” (Coulomb 1773) the aspirations of many engineers and architects intent on applying mathematical relations to real-world scenarios was finally achieved (Nicolaïdis and Chatzis 2000). By the end of the 18th century the science of architecture and engineering had finally overtaken the philosophy of form and the invocation of construction intuition. As Perez-Gomez writes in Architecture and the Crisis of Modern Science, Finally, architectural reality could be truly functionalized, allowing for an effective substitution of mathematical rules for the experience derived from building practice. Building practice could now be effectively controlled and dominated by “theory.” (Perez-Gomez 1994, 266-267)

These advances led to the establishment of two conditions that were to change the nature of the relationship between the architect, construction techniques and the materials of construction. First, the delineation of the discrete domains of study for the inventor of construction techniques and materials meant that the nonarchitect could make strides forward in improving, and profiting, from new technologies for realizing buildings. This continues today. Many individuals involved in building sciences are not architects and the proportion of nonarchitects is only likely to grow. Second, these individuals would begin the process of the founding of two of the dominant organs for research, development and manufacturing of building materials; the private corporation and the academic building science research department. This quickly led to the development of separate and distinct disciplinary languages focused on rapidly diverging interests. As a result, today, the practice of writing architectural treatises that rigorously address technical issues as well as propose serious design positions is rare, if not completely absent from the literature. Most of the serious writing on architecture today segregates the technical from the nontechnical (Pacey 1992;Stearns 1993). Research Engines In delivering the fruits of the theoretical work of the 18th century, researchers of architectural and engineering subjects were still occupied, as they are today, with the need to synthesize the lessons of quantitative analysis with the messy reality of the real, constructed, world. To achieve this synthesis, the researchers of the time needed to employ the regulated steps of the scientific method (Jacob 1997). Independent inventors sought, through the scientific method, an unassailable strategy for entering into new and potentially profitable enterprises. The individuals that took over control of the development of building materials were those 24

Chapter 1 entrepreneurs and inventors that were often only mildly associated with the technology of building. The likes of Aspdin, Monier, even Paxton were concerned with the development of materials through experimentation and eventually characterization. The methods of science were the methods employed by this group of inventors. With the use of the scientific method the slow shift toward empirical research for architectural materials began. These individuals and others came to be the front wave of the establishment of the large modern multinational corporation. As a result, these large corporations have become the stewards, and the owners, of real material innovation - including that applied to architecture. The companies most responsible for changing the materials landscape of contemporary architecture have been the larger chemical companies, steel and aluminum refiners and fabricators and glass companies. Owens Corning, Dupont, LaFarge, Pilkington, Saint-Gobain, Bethlehem Steel and many others have been setting the pace for the invention and development of new materials and enhancements of existing materials for industry. The primary vehicle for achieving this sustained dominance has been the corporate research laboratory (Jacob 1997;Latour and Woolgar 1986;Latour 1987). Architecture has seen a great deal of transfer of materials and techniques from an assortment of industries bolstered by the fruits of this research and development. Beginning with the rise of the scientific method, an interesting and influential process began to overtake traditional methods for making incremental improvements in architectural technologies and capturing these innovations within the knowledge base of the architect. The laboratory, rather than the construction site, began serving as the primary location for the development of innovative material formulations for buildings. Increasingly through the latter half of the 19th century and into the 20th, materials conceived of at a distance from the construction site, and in the research lab, and for applications not related to architecture were being redirected toward building components. The construction industry has always been too large for corporations to ignore. This began the long slide that has led to a general disassociation between the designers of buildings and the invention of materials for buildings. During the early 20th century, the research laboratory has clearly become the primary location of this kind of innovation. The modern research laboratory began its history as a corporate sponsored facility born of the activities of individual inventors and entrepreneurs. Many of them were the founders of research-active companies. The first research laboratories were established in Germany during the last half of the 19th century to serve synthetic dye manufacturers. England and the United States were to follow closely behind with a number of labs established by the first quarter of the 20th century. Thomas Alva Edison’s workshops at Menlo Park (established 1876) and West Orange, New Jersey (established 1887), were the precursors to the modern industrial research laboratory and would come to spawn the General Electric Corporation. In 1901 General Electric founded its research laboratory and within the next 12 years Kodak, 25

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Dupont, the Bell System and others followed suit (Cowan 1997). By 1930, 526 American companies had established research facilities. IBM’s first research lab was established in 1945. By the early 1980s, 11,000 American companies supported laboratory facilities (Basalla 1988;Hughes 1989;Holton 1996). These early labs established the precedent for diversification of products and an initiation of corporate sponsored invention. They also initiated an era in which patent law became a prime insulator from competition. The argument that these facilities accomplished as much in terms of sheltering commercial rights as catalyzing original research is a strong position bolstered by significant research. However, these labs did continue to accelerate changes in the physical components of buildings. In particular, advances in metals, ceramics (including glass) and synthetic polymers have caused a virtual revolution in the nature of architectural assemblies over the past 75 years (Hughes 1989;Jacob 1997). These changes are noteworthy not only for the physical changes they have brought to contemporary architectural systems but also for the altered processes of production that are necessary in their application to buildings (Strike 1991;Robbin 1996;Beukers 1998;Sebestyen 1998). The Fruits of their Labors For example, aluminum was the first metal to be introduced into buildings since the late ancient period and it has now become second only to steel. In 1935, Le Corbusier wrote “The airplane is the symbol of the new age… The aluminum framework of an airplane – search for economy of material, for lightness, always the fundamental, the essential law of nature.” (LeCorbusier 1935). Aluminum is now produced in dozens of alloys and many extruded and cast forms. A recent invention is the production of a foamed aluminum (stabilized aluminum foam, SAF) for use in lightweight structural surfaces (Ashby et al. 2000). Between 1910 and 1915 stainless steels were produced through the combination of iron and chromium. The use of stainless steels has significantly improved the durability of exterior envelope components and superstructures (Abbott 1996;Markaki et al. 2002;Markaki and Clyne 2003a,b). Entire facade assemblies have been made of stainless steel sheet; the Petronas Towers of Kuala Lumpur being one recent example, see Section 3.1. Ceramics have been much improved in the last 100 years as well. These materials, classified into three groups – glasses, clay-based materials and cementitious mixtures – have existed for the duration of the making of building components. Most of the materials contained within the ceramics grouping contain silica (SiO2). Portland cement, arrived at through a series of individual experiments by Smeaton, Parker, Frost, Aspdin and Johnson, was patented in England by Joseph Aspdin in 1794, and used extensively in construction beginning in the early 20th century (Moavenzadeh 1990). Reinforced concrete was invented in 1849 by Joseph Monier, who received a patent in 1867. It is important to note that Monier, a gardener by trade, was extremely important in continually inventing further applications and 26

Chapter 1 enhancements of reinforced concrete. Concrete now accounts for roughly 75 percent (by weight) of all construction materials used worldwide annually. Recent improvements in concrete have been largely due to the range of additives, including synthetic polymers, silica fume and other pozzolans that have enhanced properties such as strength and ductility, decreased curing periods, decreased weight, improved durability and ease of workability (Sivakumar 2002;JNMR 1998). Fibrous reinforcing and alternative rebar materials, both internal to the matrix and applied to the surface of the cured concrete, have also improved its performance (Magee and Schnell 2002;Yoshino 1990). In addition, cellular concrete has become a commonly used material in both block and panel forms. These new, higher strength and more durable concrete formulations are fueling a renaissance of cast architectural and civil forms (Bentur 2002). Glass has been improved in diverse ways, from better production techniques to the introduction of various methods for strengthening the pane itself to developing various forms of the material such as fibers, silica foams and ultra-thin sheets. Glass coatings made of thin metallic films have dramatically increased the thermal performance of insulated glass assemblies and high-performance windows and large-scale glass walls are now routine, see Section 3.3. Synthetic polymers represent the clearest example of discoveries born of the laboratory, far from the messy chaos of the construction site. In 1934, Wallace Carothers, director of research at Dupont, invented nylon 66. Since then polymer science has produced a virtual mountain of synthetics polymers. Silicones and neoprenes, urethanes and EPDM, ETFE and many other synthetic polymers are used extensively in contemporary architectural assemblies. Polymer and engineered wood composites have been a subset of this field of research (Keller 2003). Structural insulated panels, particle boards, polymer lumber and other types of cellulose reinforced materials have become a significant market of building products, see Section 3.2. These and many other examples illustrate the effect that the research laboratory has had on the physical components through which contemporary architecture is made (Bakis et al. 2002;Bentur 2002;Fridley 2002;Hillig 1976;Jacob 1997;Kranzberg and Stanley 1988). All of these material classes have been substantially altered through the work of a corporate research lab, sometimes in collaboration with an academic group (Intrachooto 2002). As these materials are developed and placed in the marketplace they inevitably change the relationship between the contemporary designer and the building itself. “While the language of architecture and the nature of construction can never coincide, neither can they go their separate ways” (Ford 1996). The plurality of architectural practice allows for a proliferation of forms and approaches to a point in which classification may seem impossible if not extremely difficult. The immense range between an architecture that acts as the simple resultant of technological forces and architectural form that productively captures innovation from other industries explains the diversity in building to be seen today.

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Technology Flows and Design Changes occur because consequential forces evolve or entirely new factors arise. These new issues may be obstacles, or new requirements, enabling techniques and technologies, improved methods, wholly novel tools and newly discovered or invented materials (Williams 2000). In certain industries tracing cause and effect from new developments is an easy task. Not so with architecture. The making of buildings is unkempt, difficult, and costly. It is a messy and fragmentary business involving huge resources and an array of technical specialties. The existence of “intermediate stages and intermediaries” clearly separates it from the production of art with its enduring legacy of the intellectual at its center (Hill 2003). The relationship between prevalent architectural form and the materials used in construction is a matter of innumerable negotiations, both knowable and unknowable, between those in charge of the alternatives and possibilities for production, the economic requirements of the project and the analysis of the engineer-specialist. It is also, in no small measure, dependent on the ephemeral preferences of the immediate client and society at large. Local acceptance of certain architectural form is also another set of negotiations that undoubtedly affect the design. It is the habit of the architect to bemoan these negotiations and yet it can be argued that these particular transactions form the center of the creative impulse. All of these negotiations occur at all stages of the project and involve the numerous “intermediaries” engaged in the building’s production. The link between materials and form is, therefore, decentralized and the object of fierce contention - the result of a fluctuating collection of often competing forces. Naturally, though, it is undeniable that a link exists between new materials and changing building form, just as it does with any human artifact (Basalla 1988). The nature of this link is not simple. Establishing unassailable schema of cause and effect is a problematic effort, steeped as it is in the difficulties of historical analysis (Kuhn 1962). But, this kind of link may not be necessary. It is certainly not the goal here. Revealing the links that exist between several interested groups, without need for definitive causal flows, reveals the primary types of transactions that shape both material and form. This kind of analysis can generate renewed efforts and novel methods for further development and better collaboration between these groups. The first step involves establishing that technical developments do affect building form, sometimes in dramatic ways (Turner 1986;LeCorbusier 1927). The potential in new materials cannot be denied in light of the inventions in structural form that come as direct results of the development of new structural materials (Von Meiss 2000;Pevsner 1968;Peters 1996, 2003). Constructing tall buildings, for example 30, 50 even 80 floors tall, is not only inconceivable but physically impossible without high strength steel and concrete (Elliot 1992). The stochastic failure mode of ceramic materials (for example, fired clays, brick, stone) is a very real problem when reaching the higher levels of internal material stress necessary for tall buildings (Moavenzadeh 1990). Therefore, masonry materials are generally used in situations 28

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Figure 1.6 A mountain-top production facility for the manufacture of a range of fiberglass products for buildings. As a result of the enormous costs of building, maintaining and tooling such facilities, major corporations are forced to seek out markets that closely align with the production capabilities already in place. This inherent conservatism of production places very high thresholds for proving the economic opportunities for real innovation in building materials.

of very low internal stress levels for buildings of relatively limited heights (Heyman 1995). The notion of making such a building of masonry - while not, strictly speaking, impossible - is certainly dubious. Therefore the modern tall building has required the development of high strength steel alloys. Many other similar examples can be made. The forms of suspension bridges, thin shells, even reinforced ceramic tile vaults, are all fundamentally influenced by material properties and system behavior. Even in our technically advanced age, the task of architecture remains firmly vested in a profoundly humane aspiration. Its medium for doing so has also not changed; ultimately it is a material medium. LeCorbusier’s statement that “The business of Architecture is to establish emotional relationships by means of raw materials” is as true now as it has ever been (LeCorbusier 1935). But what is the range of design impulse when new raw materials become available? With the development of the specialization of the material scientist out of the broadening scope of metallurgy came the necessary exclusion of nonscientists from the actual development

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of new materials. Architects were no exception. This is a change brought about by greater knowledge, and therefore more intensive specialization, since the 19th century. It is not, however, the beginning of the distancing of the architect from the materials of architecture. As previously noted, that process started during the renaissance and the first few intellectual architects of the Italian Renaissance (Hill 2003). When the diversity of materials was much more restricted to the basic metals, earthen, clay-based ceramics and other natural materials, glass, and primitive concrete, namely at the end of the 19th century, the disciplinary distance between architectural design and construction and materials science was rather small in comparison. Today, the sheer proliferation of materials, theory and analytical methods has thankfully exploded the subject of materials science and added to the depth of specialization of that field. The insulation between it and the rest of the world is intense, as it is with so many of the scientific disciplines of the 20th century (Kuhn 1962;Basalla 1988). However, the depth of learning has also irreversibly set materials science at a very great distance from the concerns of architectural design and building construction. So, there is a very real disjuncture between the expertise of architects and that of materials scientists (Allen 2004). Material innovation, application, improvement and diversification, while occurring as an oscillation between the development of materials and the design of buildings, does not encounter a smooth transition between the needs of architectural assemblies and the interests or methods of materials scientists. This is, of course as it should be. Each discipline works within its own paradigms. However, this disjuncture promotes an often incomplete and mistranslated set of instructions between the two. However, the situation does not suggest a declining design influence in the use of new materials in contemporary architecture. The architect continues to be the specialist that is needed to address the very particular issues of performance and integration between the various building systems of contemporary architecture. The material scientist, or any other nonarchitect, cannot make this kind of assessment. This may be a gap in the collaborative stream between specialists and architects, but it is a potentially fruitful separation (NMAB 2000;Restany 1997;Hartoonian 1986). In fact, in any disjuncture, there is a real opportunity for leaps of design speculation (Hurley 1982;Zambonini 1988). This is an integral part of the architectural design moment. This discontinuity offers opportunities because it allows the architect to leap into speculation without the knowledge of potential obstacles, and it also allows the materials scientist to propose wholly new approaches in seeking out applications for new materials without being discouraged by the idiosyncrasies of the processes of construction or the behavior of architectural systems. The relationship clearly remains an uneasy, but sometimes productive, discontinuity.

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Time and Materials

The US economy produces millions of tons of industrial materials and, almost as rapidly, it consumes and discards them. A recent study of the country’s materials use estimated that nearly 2.5 billion metric tons of nonfuel materials moved through the economy in 1990. Over 70 percent of these materials were used in construction. Kenneth Geiser, 2001

Creative (Re)construction

O

n March 26, 2000 in the city of Seattle in the United States, a subcontractor hired by Turner Construction Company set off a

series of explosions that resulted in one of the largest coordinated events of progressive structural collapse ever engineered and realized. The assembled crowd watched in awe as the gigantic concrete frame and thin shell buckled under the assault. As the gray cloud of dust settled, a circular pile of debris only 23 feet high remained. The demolition experts hired to implant and detonate 5,905 explosive charges in the superstructure of the Kingdome had been engineering the event for more Figure 2.1

than 18 months, taking into account issues as diverse as the resulting terrestrial vibrations from 25,000 tons of

Debris field remaining after the explosive demolition of the Seattle Kingdome brought down in a carefully planned series of detonations over the brief period of 16.8 seconds. The 4,728 pounds of explosives generated enough energy to mimic an earthquake of magnitude 2.3.

concrete roof falling to the ground, possible damaging

Seattle Kingdome, Seattle, WA (1976).

day the deed was successfully done and work began on

Skilling Helle Christiansen Robertson, Structural Engineers.

effects on surrounding structures and infrastructure, the subsequent complex series of tasks necessary for removing the collapsed structure and the political and public relations ramifications of destroying one of the largest buildings in the city. At the end of that spring the next phase in the recycling and removal of 125,000 31

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Figure 2.2 A demolition site. The existing building stock is in a constant state of material flux - however, the growth of modern cities has placed ever greater stocks of materials into a semi-permanent situation.

tons of concrete debris left by the demolition. The site was to be quickly prepared for the construction of a new stadium (Liss 2000). The last stage in the stadium’s life was now over as a result of its creative destruction. When the Kingdome was completed in 1976, it became the latest in a distinguished and long line of spectacular concrete domes beginning with the Roman Pantheon. In fact, the Kingdome and the Pantheon were structural cousins, each having had the distinction of being the largest concrete dome structure of its time. The Pantheon spans 142 feet in a thick concrete dome - the Kingdome had achieved a clear span of 661 feet using a combination of radial rib beams and transversely spanning thin shells of only 5 inches in thickness. The structural engineers of the Kingdome, Skilling Helle Christiansen Robertson (the same engineers of the ill-fated World Trade Center in New York City), had delivered a building design that would eventually cost $67 million to construct. Once completed, the stadium was used extensively - hosting 3,361 events and 73,130,463 spectators in total - until in 1994, four ceiling tiles fell from the underside of the concrete roof, precipitating the closing of the stadium for, what was to become, a four month and $70 million dollar repair. The Pantheon still stands in Rome, built between 118 and 125AD; it is now 1,879 years old. 32

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Figure 2.3 Material recovery from construction is now commonplace and contributes significant amounts of metals to the greater industrial economy. This building had been designed for easy reclamation of structural steel members by minimizing welding.

The Kingdome was demolished in its 24th year of operation and during its service life of two dozen years had incurred normal maintenance costs plus the $70 million repair expenditure in its 18th year - only 6 years before its purposeful destruction. While the cost of this short service life can be calculated in monetary terms, the larger complete cost of the building including the total environmental costs, associated material resources, energy in construction and operation, dissipation of useful materials and other “unaccounted”-for expenditures are almost inestimable. The replacement structure, completed in 2001 and named the Seahawks Stadium, cost the state of Washington and the city of Seattle $430 million dollars, including cost overruns. This level of expenditure is controversial for the substantial public funds committed, $300 million in taxes and other public funding mechanisms (in addition to substantial private monies). But, as part of a recommitment to a civic sports franchise, and more generally to urban economic development, the creative reconstruction of the stadium played a pivotal role. Originally, the Kingdome had been designed with an anticipated lifetime of 75 years, possibly as long as 120 years with good maintenance. While it served its basic purpose well, architectural and functional deficiencies were articulated soon after its opening. Of course, as with any building, its lifetime could have been extended indefinitely given the appropriate level 33

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of material and financial investment. But, it was considered a “mean” space, partly due to the overwhelming amount of unfinished concrete and the tight spaces of its circulation. It was also faulted for the paucity of its amenities and a general feeling of stingy architectural design. It must also be noted that the economics of American team sports were rapidly changing during the 1980s and 1990s and the easy movement of lucrative teams from one city to another was becoming routine. Many American cities that could claim a professional sports team were facing the prospect of losing it to another city unless substantial commitments were made. This often included the construction of a new stadium. In fact, my previous use of the phrases creative destruction and creative reconstruction were carefully chosen to invoke the basis for the modern transformation of our cities - the workings of capitalism. Creative destruction - the process that defines the “essential fact about capitalism” (Schumpeter 1950) - is a primary motivator in the assessment of obsolescence for all manner of capitalism’s products. Continually cycling through the economy new, and ostensibly better, products requires discarding the old artifacts of production and recalibrating modes of consumption. This incessant throughput establishes one of the principal rhythms of the business cycle - product-oriented introductions driving ever-increasing consumption patterns. Maintaining this heady flow of materials requires technology and production advances as well as generally accepted socioeconomic ideologies primed to legitimize consumption at the very high levels that citizens of the developed world are now accustomed to. The driver of creative destruction - essentially, in with the new and out with the old - has had a major influence on our assessment of the worth of buildings in society today. The discussion of obsolescence (see “Obsolescence as the Anti-permanence” below) will explore the relationship between self-consciously constructed notions of obsolescence and the actual lifetimes of buildings. The case study of the Kingdome offers one example of the recalibration that we have undergone in assessing the useful lifetime of our buildings and our willingness to dip into material resources to better satisfy our present needs. Placing the history of the notion of obsolescence adjacent to the resource pressures that our societies are facing, several questions arise. How is it that we have reached so prolific a level of material consumption that we so boldly discard even the largest of our buildings? What are the environmental ramifications, but also and just as importantly - what are the design and construction opportunities? Has engaging in a cycle of willful obsolescence and the resulting intensified material consumption made even our buildings easily dispensable and vulnerable to financial bottom lines and ideologies of the superiority of all things new? One of the best ways in which to engage these questions involves invoking some of the pioneering work of the relatively new science of industrial ecology. Essentially a science of flux, this discipline has assumed the enormous task of accounting for material and energy 34

Chapter 2 flows at all physical and temporal scales, for all societal activities industrial and otherwise (Ayres 1994;Allenby 1999;Graedel and Allenby 2003). The purpose of the kinds of analyses that result is a better understanding - more accurate and current - of the ways in which we, as a species, interact with the physical world (Kibert 1999b, 2003). Using the analogy of ecological systems places the emphasis, and the research mandate, on examining the relationships that exist and those emerging between human activities and the environment. In addition, industrial ecology - by implication, but sometimes remaining unstated - endeavors to use this knowledge in proposing alternative relationships that improve our material and energy resource use while minimizing deleterious impacts. Later in this chapter, various elements of industrial ecology - both in terms of technological and design proposals - will be used to clarify relationships between the lifetime service of buildings and their use of materials. In transferring certain concepts and tools from industrial ecology to architectural design and construction it is critical to embrace the broad coverage of topics, and sometimes obsessions, that architectural design has come to invoke as part of its discourse. Acknowledging the fact that theories of contemporary design do not recoil from selectively mining the intellectual content of disciplines as diverse as post-structural philosophy, literary criticism, conceptual art, genetics, biomechanics, material science and many other - probably most other - highly intellectual pursuits is the first step in approaching the contemporary design context in a positive way. This is relevant to our effort to transfer knowledge and tools from industrial ecology in very specific ways. In particular, this chapter focuses on two aspects that are exclusive to material flows in construction; the long and uncertain actual lives of buildings and the dominance of intangible, ephemeral and non-physical forces in the determination of building obsolescence. (Re)merging Time and Space Architects have clearly been neither masters nor servants of the material flows of their time. Designers and builders from ancient antiquity to the present have assumed the roles of both innovators and simple consumers of the material flux that flowed through their societies and settled into their buildings. Materials use in most buildings - artifacts of large volumes wed to specific sites - have always been determined by local availability, current practice and experience, cost and construction expediency, and to a lesser extent, design and aesthetic preferences. Buildings have always benefited from the opportunism of resource exploitation whether or not architects or designers were directly involved. For example, one need only travel to any one of dozens of European cities to find evidence of the reuse of materials from dismantled Roman buildings. For example, the Catholic Church of Cordoba, situated as it is in the middle of a Moorish mosque, reuses Roman masonry as part of the mosque that serves as a portico for the Christian church.

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In broader terms of both temporal events and architectural type, the realities of time have been inextricably linked to the exigencies of using materials in buildings. For example, many people today attend to the urgent needs of materials for basic shelter on a regular basis. That is, for many “vernacular” or “indigenous” material systems, service lives are relatively short and the consideration of lifetime predictions for both assemblies and the building as a whole is intimately linked to the material reality of the architecture itself, and sometimes to a matter of survival. For example, many earthen material systems, such as pisé and sundried bricks covered in a mud finishing layer, are dependent on seasonal and annual cycles and are interwoven with the material durability and the investment necessary to keep the building viable. This situation can become tragic when the effort involved can become a critical opportunity cost preventing communities and individuals from using scarce resources for improving other aspects of their lives. In addition, these kinds of buildings are known to contribute to the compromised health and welfare of its occupants from collapse during earthquakes and disease from insufficient ventilation. It has been estimated that at least 1 billion people live in earthen structures today. The buildings are seasonally maintained and adjusted by their occupants. Design lifetimes are short term and closely monitored. On the other hand, many architects designing buildings for the developed world default their lifetime service expectations to a general design life of 50 years or so. However, it is clear that there is considerable uncertainty regarding a building’s actual lifetime and the forces that the building will encounter during its service life. It is also clear that this uncertainty contributes to the flux of materials used in construction of all kinds including renovation, adaptive reuse, deconstruction, new build and every other kind of building effort. This situation is curious, given the inevitably temporal nature of any material use and the seeming complexity of predicting anything in 50 years. That is, it is impossible to understand the use of materials in any human activity without gauging the various temporal scales of application to the artifacts of that activity (Lynch 2001;Daniels 2002). It is also impossible to assess the opportunity costs of committing large-scale volumes of materials to building projects without this same examination of the actual forces that compel change over time. In the influential book The Tower and the Bridge, Professor David Billington makes a strong case for the moral obligation of a structural and building art consisting in equal measure of inventive form and technical innovation and including economic sobriety (Billington 1985). Mobilizing huge material and economic resources, the civil engineer invents the structural form of a society’s “infrastructure”. Appropriate form and responsible structural practice do not solely arise from the tenants of theory but are steadfastly rooted in the physical, economic and social opportunities and constraints. The amount of material used, the overall cost, the placement of that material to achieve a safe and reliable structural span and the opportunity cost of the use of those same resources defines the depth with which the engineer (and designer) engages with the material world. Professor Billington reminds us that the substantial resources devoted to these kinds of projects are inescapably diverted away from other 36

Chapter 2 endeavors, and so should be considered in light of these lost opportunities. Yet, does society qualify its considerations of the use of vast amounts of material in such a rational way? It seems that building to economic ends, using the art and science of modern engineering, is only the best first step. The duration of the actual service lives of these structures and buildings, and therefore a primary component of the “final” measure of their worth to our society, is substantially determined by a plethora of unruly and intangible forces arising from independent actors. A building’s lifetime is often determined in arenas not directly related to the design of the buildings themselves; real estate and financial markets, urban planning and zoning code agencies, corporate and governmental owners and building managers. As a result, the actual service life of a building is not only independent of its design life but quite removed from it. There is very little in the process of building design today that addresses the uncertainty of its likely service life. Yet, the overall flux of material into and out of construction is inextricably linked to the amount of time materials are enlisted in the physical systems and assemblies of buildings. It hasn’t always been quite like this. For example, with the widespread industrialization of architectural components and the standardization of primary structural materials in the developed world, like steel and concrete, a broad swath of buildings built today possess generally higher durabilities than in the past. This is because buildings built in these economies do not use high maintenance, low performance materials like earth and natural fibers. Therefore, seasonal maintenance and short-term durability - and therefore regular material inputs - have become a thing of the past. Today, no longer do homeowners need to patch their thatch roofs every spring because material alternatives (asphalt tiles, standing seam metal etc.) have come to completely replace that system (and substantially improve lifetime durability). Curiously then, the actual lifetime profiles of contemporary buildings are ruled less by material and component durability - a dominant factor in the past and the “traditional” measure of service life - than by a series of intangible forces including aesthetic discrimination, user preferences, market-related fluctuations and evolving social norms for work and living (Brand 1994). These constructs of value have evolved substantially, and often fitfully, over time. A useful survey of the changes between these various factors can be accomplished by considering a concept mentioned briefly above; obsolescence. Obsolescence is a concept that has dramatically influenced the making of new buildings and the destruction of existing building stock in the name of aesthetics, planning efficiency, real estate value and the ideals of modernity. It is not possible to render a comprehensive history of the array of variants of the idea and use of obsolescence in architecture. However, it is useful to discuss certain aspects in the evolution of this notion that have directly affected the determination of the end-of-life for buildings, and even large portions of cities. 37

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Figure 2.4 A section of the Chicago Loop at twilight. In 1930, the National Association of Building Owners and Managers estimated that much of the Loop district in Chicago had been demolished and rebuilt twice since the Great Fire of 1870. Many of the buildings that were taken down were substantially less than 50 years old and quite large. Several were the earliest skyscapers built in the United States (Abramson 2005;BNABOM 1930).

Obsolescence as the Anti-permanence The end of life of any human artifact is popularly considered to be when it reaches a state of substantial uselessness. But reaching a consensus on the definition of utility can be difficult. Real estate economics places the end of utility as generally that point in time when a property no longer commands rent at a level commensurate with comparable properties in the immediate area. But because the rent potential for buildings and land itself can be considered separately, one can reasonably distinguish two types of rent (Marx 1984;Houghton 1993;Bryson 1997). The first type of rent is “a function of the advantages offered by the site of a property, and which do not depend on any action by the owner” (Lamarche 1976). A building situated in one location will draw a very different rent if located in a very different location in that same city. We can call this type of rent location-dependent rent (LDR). The second type is dependent on the state of the building itself and is independent of the location. Therefore a new, up-to-date building will draw the highest rent for its location. Obviously, once a building is constructed the potential to draw the highest rent diminishes with the passage of time. This type of rent is called building-dependent rent (BDR). 38

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Figure 2.5 Anthropomorphic analogies have been applied to cities for the sake of creating a discourse of building “health” that contributed to the general formulation of building obsolescence. Creating cities that could “breathe” and streets that eliminated the urban disease of blight led to violent excisions of buildings and resulted in the demolition and reconstruction of entire neighborhoods. Pine Street, New York City, NY (2005).

Each one of these types of rent, LDR and BDR, is related to similarly defined types of obsolescence. LDR is influenced by the state of the location within its context. In urban contexts, a location may suffer through radical changes including the deterioration of its infrastructure, increases in crime, building abandonment due to suburban flight and other forces that result in a lowering of the level of rents that can be achieved at that location and the immediate vicinity. This locational obsolescence is independent of the state of the building itself. Similarly, BDRs are highly influenced by the state of the building; the performance of its various systems, the aesthetic state of its facades, interior finishes etc. (and not the state of the location). The aging of these systems will contribute to building obsolescence. However, embedded within these ideas of building and locational obsolescence are various qualitative factors that contribute to the overall assessment of both the state of the location and the separate state of the building. When we delve deeper into the useful service of a building there is no question that the utility of architecture is a concept that wanders far and wide beyond the strict boundaries of function. With even a simple notion of architecture, it is clear that a service is provided by simply providing a measure of delight (compounding L. Kahn’s terms discussed in the Prologue). Therefore, a loss of utility cannot always be directly linked to prescribed assessments of value especially when those values include incommensurable elements of the experience and use of buildings by people.

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For example, objects hold sentimental value for all of us even after their useful lives have finished. A broken down car, old furniture, keepsakes, all speak to a complex relationship that humans retain to physical objects of all scales. In fact, there is an aspect to historical preservation that speaks to the value of buildings, not as functional architecture but as unique historical artifacts with a value that extends well beyond any reasonable use of their spatial volumes or building systems. Most architects would agree that these values are important and have a place in our assessment of the investment society should devote to these less-thanuseful architectural artifacts. Nevertheless, there have been periods when notions of the utility of things has been consciously constructed by interest groups intent on pursuing ideologies of change. These ideologies often had their basis in the opportunistic economic rewards of real estate development. In recent work, Daniel M. Abramson of the Department of Art and Art History at Tufts University has begun to shed light on the convoluted history of building utility and obsolescence and the relationship to a burgeoning capitalism of land development (Abramson 2005). Abramson notes that, as part of an evolution of modern capitalism generally, the United States (and subsequently most developed western economies) have in the past adopted a diverse collection of criteria for the determination of end-of-life and loss of utility for buildings, notably commercial buildings and then many other objects of industry (automobiles, household appliances, clothing etc.). Certainly diverse and originating from a variety of sources, these criteria have been amazingly consistent in one respect; for the most part, the central determination of utility was constructed from external “causes outside the physical condition of the building itself” (Roberts 1930;Abramson 2005). This is not surprising given the context - social, economic and cultural - in which buildings operate. Their physical states are merely one small aspect of their larger service to society. Obvious examples come to mind, such as the “utility” of the Empire State Building in New York City as well as other landmark buildings like the John Hancock in both Boston and Chicago, the Transamerica Tower in San Francisco, the Sears Tower in Chicago. Aside from its local service to its tenants, the Empire State is a symbol (both collectively and on an individual level) of the city and its residents. In other words, the economic utility of the building can be affected by but not fully defined by the physical state of its systems because its service can be considered very broadly and very differently depending on your viewpoint (and particular stake). Similarly, a building in very good working order may be deemed not to be serving its main purpose (generally, the purpose being reduced to revenue generation). Its aesthetics may be detrimental to attracting new rental tenants or its location may have become less than attractive for the type of tenants necessary for a profitable return on investment. Its materials and systems may possess substantial service life remaining while the determination of a complete loss of utility may not be out of the question. In this circumstance, one option available to the 40

Chapter 2 owners is the removal of the building; its physical demolition and replacement. Therefore, if functional utility and the overall assessment of value can be so dramatically influenced by a constructed notion like obsolescence, and that notion may change over time, how much do we really understand about the character of building lifetimes and especially the condition of the end-of-life? Furthermore then, how much do we really understand the mechanisms that control the enormous material consumption of construction based as it is on shifting notions of utility? The Kingdome is only one example, albeit dramatic, of the uncertainties engendered and the material costs borne in realizing a large physical object, having it become part of the functioning building stock of a contemporary American city and meeting a surprising and unpredictable early demise. Its demolition and replacement is evidence of the multifaceted and multifarious elements that contribute to a working definition of utility. Closely related to utility and a prime determinant of end-of-life conditions has been the recurring notion of obsolescence - the condition of passing out of use and becoming archaic and readily replaced by a more effective or sophisticated thing. Obsolescence has maintained a central position in our assessment of architectural function throughout the 20th century. The idea of obsolescence has changed in various ways; through an evolution of popular usage and through organized initiatives, as a point of advocacy for change and in the service of generating consumption momentum. The notion has remained stubbornly resilient and continues to represent an enduring set of concepts about the role of architecture in society. As a historically mutating concept, obsolescence can be considered in terms of the various discourses that were instrumental in formulating the notion and changing it. Abramson has defined three separate “discourses” during the period of time from roughly the 1910s until present day; the Financial Discourse, the Urban Discourse and the Consumer Discourse. Each had its purpose and its assembled groups of stakeholders and proponents (Abramson 2005). The Financial Discourse had its origins in the growing sophistication of early 20th century real estate development in the central business cores of Chicago and New York. In need of methods for evaluating the potential for return on investment on property and in search of explanations regarding the increasingly common phenomenon of the demolition of relatively new (and very large) buildings in these cities, several attempts were made to define and closely examine the “financial decay” of buildings (Bolton 1911). At the time, both cities were witnessing the unfamiliar and troubling spectacle of the dismantling of very large and relatively new buildings and their replacement with equally large buildings. There is good documentation showing that many, if not a vast majority of these buildings were in very good states - with little or no problematic deterioration of their building systems before demolition (Abramson 2005;Roberts 1930;Gray 2005). Buildings in the Loop of Chicago, including the 41

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cavernous Marshall Field Wholesale Store (architect: H.H. Richardson) declared obsolete after only ten years and demolished in its 44th year, the 41 year old Tacoma Building (a skyscraper designed by Holabird & Roche) completely demolished and replaced by a similar tall building, the Singer Building of New York City also 41 when demolished in 1967, and many other buildings dating to the early 20th century are examples of what has been characterized as “the useful or economic existence of all classes of buildings, in the rapid march of modern conditions, is constantly shortening” (Bolton 1911). Even at this early time of modern development in America’s fastest growing cities, developers and others were remarking on the extreme shortness of life of many of the largest buildings in urban centers. Several researchers at the time stated that building lifetimes were likely to remain at an average of between 30 and 40 years (Burton 1919;Klein 1922;Bryson 1997). The Financial Discourse of obsolescence has been preoccupied with developing models that explain the vast flux of buildings (and associated materials of construction). However, despite the tabulation of actuarial tables for building lifetimes and the linkages between these predictors of life expectancy and the evolving tax code of the United States, the seemingly precise analytical tools produced over the decades belie our inability to get very close to a holistic understanding of the nature of building lifetimes. Lately it has been remarked that the speed of obsolescence is now tightly related to the global economy; a more restless and frenetic set of financial and social relations (Bryson 1997). Speculation has raised the spectre of a permanent pressure on buildings to respond faster and more dramatically to the forces leavened on their ability to deliver a level of service demanded by this global context. While the tools of the Financial Discourse were intent on an analytical explanation of unexpected demolition and rebuilding, the Urban Discourse has been responsible for some of the most egregious planning and urban design projects in the US - often placed under the sweetening moniker of “urban renewal”. This discourse has been marked by the adoption of an anthropomorphic metaphor of the city and the building as living, breathing organisms. Blight, the urban diseases of crime, squalor, poverty and racial and ethnic tension were attributed to antiquated and substandard urban form. The solutions of the surgical removal of structures, renewal of neighborhoods and the complete replanning of entire districts of cities were considered to be appropriately bold measures to combat the malaise of the modern city. Obsolescence of urban form meant that physical solutions could be brought to bear as social and economic “cures”. As Abramson notes, the Financial and Urban Discourses are closely related to each other both in their notions of the effects of the loss of utility and their application to architectural and urban form. The Consumer Discourse extends beyond architectural form to encompass essentially the whole of modern consumption today. Obsolescence, as a determinant of utility, heralds both the cessation of use for that artifact and the commencement of use for something new. The pair essentially defines the most 42

Chapter 2 direct route to the dilemma of obsolescence. This dilemma is not only an opportunity for but the raison d’être and a primary engine of capitalism. The Consumer Discourse focuses on this particular facet of obsolescence. During the first third of the 20th century, simultaneous with the modern development of financial tools for real estate speculation, several phrases entered into the vocabulary of corporate business planning and marketing including progressive obsolescence, planned obsolescence and creative waste. During the next several decades various sectors of the American business community were to discover the opportunities afforded by advocating a cyclical consumption pattern based on the certainty of continual improvements in technology, materials and, therefore, products themselves. Yearly issues of automobile models, appliances, electronic products, and many other items infused the consumer market with a strong belief in the advantages (and personal satisfactions) of staying up to date. The benefit to business was obvious - a built-in reason to decouple the end of life of an item from its actual utility and a recoupling of its lifetime to a design and production outside of its physical state. This inevitably resulted in greater overall “churn” of consumer items. Eventually this frenzied consumption settled into what we now have - a market with select hot spots of planned obsolescence (such as automobiles) and a general infusion of the strategy across all product types and industry sectors. All three of these discourses of obsolescence have had an impact on the character of contemporary building lives and the associated material expenditures of modern buildings. Particularly relevant for our discussion here is the way in which the history of obsolescence has been modulated by a combination of economic and social forces driven by the direct advocacy of business interests and the indirect influence of cultural norms. Both direct interests and indirect norms continue to evolve over time. Therefore, establishing a definitive character of building lives is complicated by the fact that we cannot ignore the significant contributions from unpredictable actors and intangible forces that change. And finally, as we’ve seen, obsolescence has been used to assemble related sets of beliefs for the purpose of analyzing diminishing utility and advocating for a kind of anti-permanence position for architecture. Whether invoked by accountants and real estate developers to argue for escalating demolition and construction of buildings and urban districts entirely or used as the foundation of a new paradigm for disposable, adaptable architecture, the various discourses are essentially ideologies for facilitating change - ideologies against permanence. Of course, these ideologies of accelerated obsolescence contrast sharply with recent advocates for the design and construction of very long lived buildings (Brand 2000). The long-life loosefit ethic of sustainable design calls for a general lengthening of the durability of buildings and their systems despite good evidence that building lifetimes are not deterministically linked to the physical state of these assemblies. The 150, 500, even 700 year building is not just 43

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a passing fancy of the “paper architecture” of intellectuals and nonbuilding academics any longer. Long life has been an accepted position of several of the founders of the latest version of building responsibly. The Cathedral of Los Angeles, recently completed and designed by the Spanish architect Rafael Moneo, uses a concrete technology engineered specifically for a 500 year lifetime with minimal maintenance, Figure 2.18. The financial premium for this effort is considered safe, applied as it is to an institution whose continued existence is believed to be assured, even over several centuries (Roberts 2003; see Section 3.3 Ceramics for a discussion concerning long-life concrete). In fact, long-life design has become a central mantra of the sustainable design movement - based, as it is, on the rationale that extending the useful service life of nonrenewable materials is a fundamental goal of resource savings by reducing the extraction of virgin materials. However, as we have seen, and will see again later in this chapter, material durability is only one small, and often insignificant, component of the assessment of prolonged value in service. Discussions of utility and obsolescence have tended to dominate and make more complicated the simplistic notions of designated service lifetimes used by most practicing architects leading to new research and design opportunities (Fernandez 2004).

Before

treating these issues in more detail and relating them to current design strategies, it is useful to review the composition of construction materials used in contemporary buildings in the following sections. Material Change During the time between the construction of the Pantheon and the demolition of the Kingdome, the material world has changed quite dramatically. A look around you now will almost certainly confirm this. Glass, aluminum, plastics, plywood, latex paints - all of these materials have been born of modern, and mostly very recent, developments. While it is true that the construction of buildings still includes traditional materials such as brick, stone, concrete and timber, albeit many substantially altered and improved, nontraditional substances such as neoprene and silicone, glass and aramid fiber reinforced composites, polycarbonates and polymer concretes are now routinely used. This prolific augmentation of the materials available for construction has altered the design and construction of buildings in too many ways to specify here. In fact, it is important to note that these new materials have also fundamentally altered the construction process as much as the completed building. Consider, for example, the prodigious use of construction fabrics used to enclose large structural frames for the purpose of establishing a temporary weather screen and protecting surrounding structures and pedestrians from miscellaneous debris (see Section 3.2 Polymers). The aspects of the change that most concerns us here are the ways in which these materials have brought about significant shifts in the kinds and amounts of materials that flow into and out of the industrial enterprise of contemporary construction. 44

Chapter 2 First, we consider the actual changes in the types of materials available to the architect. Much of this analysis relates specifically to the United States. However, similar sequences of events have also shaped the material reality of architecture in most European nations and portions of both Asia and Latin America. A brief survey of some of the most important material changes follows. Following this survey, a discussion of building lifetimes brings us back to the intention of merging material and temporal considerations. In tracking the intensity of use of the major materials used in construction, let’s begin by considering the 100 years of the 20th century. Figure 2.6 also includes the 150 years before, for the purpose of clarifying the context that was established upon the arrival of 1900. Figure 2.7 illustrates the percentage concentrations of select materials used in construction at two points in time, 1900 and 2000. During the 20th century, the US population grew from a little over 76 million in 1900 to over 286 million in 2000. The home ownership rate increased from 46 percent to over 60 percent in the same period (US Census 2000). During the 200 years between 1800 and 2000 the country experienced a great urbanization transforming a nation of farm owners into one of city dwellers. In 1800, 93.9 percent of the population lived in rural areas. By 1990 that figured had dropped to only 24.8 percent (US Census 2000;Mines 1991). At the beginning of the 20th century overall material consumption per capita in the United States was 2 metric tons. In 1995, despite the increase in the absolute number of people in the US, a corresponding increase in per capita consumption now amounted to 10 metric tons. Therefore, along with the population growth the total consumption of materials in the United States grew by a multiple of almost 19 times in the 20th century. With 5 percent of the population on earth, the United States consumes roughly one third of its materials (during the period from 1970 to 2000). However, between 1970 and 2000, the rate of increase at which the rest of the world consumed materials far outstripped that of the US (1.8 percent versus 1 percent). During this period US consumption increased from 2 to 2.8 billion metric tons, and world consumption from 5.7 to 9.5 billion metric tons, Figure 2.8. Even so, half of the bulk of materials consumed in the US during this past century occurred during the last 25 years (Matos and Wagner 1998;Kesler 1994). The vast mechanization of many industries was one of the main causes of these increases in consumption and shifts in population. As described in Chapter 1, the shift from an agricultural to an industrial economy and then, in the 1950s and 1960s, to a service economy drove great changes in material consumption. Similar changes were also transforming northern Europe (Adriannse et al. 1997). A cause and consequence of this industrialization was the invention, improvement and commercialization of new materials; steels, better concretes, aluminum and other light metals and synthetic polymers through the concerted efforts of new research engines. These new materials were critical to the development of methods for increased productivity in all industries. They allowed for designs that were lighter, stronger and faster to construct, made of materials that facilitated faster industrial throughputs and tapped into less expensive and more readily available mineral feedstocks. 45

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While changes to the material composition of the economy were dramatic, Figure 2.6 shows that during the 20th century, traditional materials (for our purposes here, those materials that were used in architecture before 1900) not only continued to be used but were used in increasing quantities during the expansion of the American economy, also see Figure 2.7. Between 1900 and 2000 the use of brick increased by a multiple of 5, glass by 10, steel for nonresidential use by 20, and copper by an astounding 2000 (Moavenzadeh 1990;Brown 1998;Matos and Wagner 1998). These “traditional” materials continue to provide the majority of primary materials for buildings today, while the addition of aluminum and polymers in all forms will continue to affect the overall diversity of materials used in buildings. Therefore, despite anecdotes to the contrary, buildings do contain many of the same materials that were used before 1900. However, important improvements to those materials, changes in their placement within architectural assemblies, overall mass of the material used for particular purposes, and the nature of the craft used during the process of construction have all changed dramatically. In addition, while many traditional materials are used, their proportional contribution to the mass of contemporary building has radically changed. The change in the proportion of various materials used in buildings has resulted in some important trends, including the increased use of nonrenewables and the emerging priority to account for the embodied energy of architectural assemblies. For example, a consequence of these new materials is a significant increase in the consumption of nonrenewables, see Figure 2.9. In 1900, 42 percent (by weight) of the materials consumed in the US were renewable (all industries). By the end of the century this had decreased to 5 percent (Matos and Wagner 1998). Nonrenewables are those materials that do not regenerate (within one or, at most, two generations) and are extracted from the natural capital of the earth, such as metals, petroleum fuels, minerals, etc. In order to gain a better understanding of the ways in which contemporary materials have altered construction, three topics are addressed in more detail; dematerialization, substitution and technology transfer (Grübler 1996). Dematerialization, Substitution and Technology Transfer These three subjects play important roles in catalyzing and sustaining material changes to the physical constitution and form of architecture. Throughout history, it is clear that all three transformative modes have contributed dramatically to fundamentally changing the process and forever altering the result of the construction of buildings. Since the industrial revolution, the pace of change has quickened. Examples of all three are easily identified. The slender iron columns of Henri Labrouste’s Bibiliotheque Ste-Genevieve in Paris of 1843-50 is an ideal example of dematerialization through the substitution of iron for stone as a technology transferred from the new civil projects of towers and bridges. 46

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US materials use in construction showing general trends of materials use over time. Note that the projected levels for metals (with the exception of aluminum) is predicted to decline over the next several decades due to increasing fuel costs, depletion of ores and the resulting increase in pricing. On the other hand, polymers will continue to substitute for other materials resulting in an increase of its proportional contribution to the architectural construct. Also notice that concrete will continue to be a primary structural material due to its relative affordability, almost comprehensive local and regional availability, ease of application at most scales and versatility. A: aluminum R: copper B: brick S(r): steel C: concrete S(n): steel, nonresidential G: glass W(r): wood, residential P: polymers W(n): wood, nonresidential Sources: Adriannse et al. (1997), Moavenzadeh (1990), Matos and Wagner (1998), Mines (1991), Wagner et al. (2002), Wernick et al. (1996), Smith (2003), various USGS and US Minerals Reports.

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In this example, and in many others like it from around the industrial revolution, all three modes are present. This is often the case, as dematerialization will cause a ripple through system design that prompts both material substitution and technology transfer. Similarly, a material substitution and technology transfer may result in dematerialization and technology transfer opportunities as with the introduction of synthetic polymer sealants for building glazing seals (transferred from automotive technologies) by Albert Kahn in the 1930s. This technology transfer allowed for a substantially lightened glass wall and began the process of the complete substitution of sealing materials in buildings from natural rubbers to synthetic polymers. But in considering these topics, it is necessary to acknowledge an overwhelmingly ideological basis of the respective architectural positions on dematerialization, substitution and technology transfer. That is, architects have been as involved in advocating the “correctness” of their aesthetic preferences by invoking the inevitability of dematerialization and substitution trends, for example, as they have been in analyzing the actual mechanisms behind the broad material changes affecting contemporary architecture. This should not be surprising or alarming. Architects have always been - and have always needed to be - part artist, part technician and part politician. Having large technosocial themes to wrap around building proposals is an inevitable facet of the business of building. Yet, we can discern certain clear changes in the material reality of our buildings that indicate irreversible dematerialization and substitution apart from the chatter of the designing classes. The substitution of asbestos with other fibrous insulating materials, like e-glass, is an irreversible material substitution (at least for the western developed nations but, alas not many countries of Latin America and Asia where asbestos is still used in a variety of building products). This substitution is the direct result of establishing the mechanism that links the fibers to detrimental health effects. Similarly, dematerialization has clearly played a significant role in the transformation of the use of stone in buildings from the once massive structural blocks of masonry construction to the plated veneers of nonstructural stone curtainwalls pinned to structural frames (using stone panels of 15⁄8 inch thickness and less). Dematerialization Dematerialization is a well-documented force in the transformation of material flows in the making of human artifacts. The reasons for this are self-evident; that is, the search to satisfy a need with less material - and therefore reduce one’s cost and effort - is a purely rational adjustment based as it is on self-interest. However, one can define dematerialization in many ways; as the reduction in the volume of resource use per economic unit, as the overall reduction of materials used in society, as the reduction of wastes generated per unit of industrial product, etc. (Cleveland and Ruth 1999;Wernick 1996;Herman et al. 1989;Bernardini and 48

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Church of Il Jesu, Rome, Italy (16th c.)

Figure 2.10a, b

Johnson Wax Building, USA (20th c.)

Dramatic dematerialization can be seen in this simple juxtaposition of two buildings at the same scale. The superior performance of steel reinforced concrete of the Johnson Wax Building can be seen to be a technology that dramatically dematerializes the overall material used in the structure.

Galli 1993;Labys and Waddell 1989). The resultant increase in “resource productivity” leads to the idea of resource-light economies, a known trend in the developed industries of today and an aspiration of many resource researchers for the global economy (Goodland and Daly 1993;Sachs 2000;Bartelmus 2002). Many diverse factors may contribute to an event of dematerialization, but five distinct conditions often play significant roles. First, technical progress may offer a material, process or configuration that significantly reduces material use per unit of service. Second, resource pressures, such as diminishing ore quality, may prompt development of material efficient practices. Third, supply or distribution interruptions may compel a search for efficiencies, as in the short-lived shift to fuel-efficient compact cars during and after the OPEC oil embargo of the 1970s. Fourth, the emergence of security concerns, including the break-out of war, may spur reduction in the consumption of materials that reveal nascent efficiencies in the overall material use of societies that then become accepted norms long after the security problem has passed. And finally, economics is almost always a factor - gaining the same economic return from investing in less material is a powerful compelling force. 50

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Church of Notre Dame, Raincy, France (20th c.)

Figure 2.11a, b

Parthenon, Athens, Greece (5th c.)

Another comparison showing the intense dematerialization of modern structures (again, both structures are shown at the same scale for correct comparison purposes). Sources: Plans shown in Figures 2.10 and 2.11 based on drawings published in Sacriste Jr., E. (1959) Building Footprints: a selection of 45 building plans, all drawn at the same scale. School of Design, Raleigh N.C., Vol. 9, No. 1.

Dematerialization has been a steady interest and periodic obsession of a series of architectural schools of thought in the 20th century, from the dematerialized cable nets of Otto Frei to the polygonal structural surfaces and latticeworks of Buckminster Fuller and Kenneth Snelson to the current fascination with polymer films, high-strength fibers, aerogels, translucent structural materials and other “light” materials (Beukers 1998;Mori 2002;Riley 1995;Kahn 2005;Krausse and Lichtenstein 1999;Kronenburg 1997). The idea of lightness has been irresistible to the architect enamored of industrial analogs (the dirigible, airplane, automobile, laptop, cell phone) but less so for those interested in an ecology of construction that reveals the totality of material use. For it can be readily demonstrated that the lightness of the finished artifact is little indication, and often misleading, of the overall material use (consumption and dissipation) that results from the making of that object. For example, a heavy and massive traditional stone building constructed today would require less material overall, than the same building in aluminum and glass. The reason resides in the dramatic differences in the amounts of material that result as wastes (mine tailings, industrial wastes, fuel expenditures in processing 51

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and transportation) between the stone and aluminum and glass. Buckminster Fuller was keen to know how much a building weighed. A better question would now be, how much material resides in the building plus how much material was displaced and energy consumed in the making of the building (Wernick et al. 1996;Weizsacker 1998)? A measure of this displacement is the rucksack, a quantification of the materials and their volumes that serve in the making of a desired material (Schmidt-Bleek 1993). Sometimes the rucksack is used to pursue and identify material expenditures outside of a region and sometimes it is used to quantify material expenditures that are not accounted for in standard economic accounting. In any case, the rucksack is a measure of the amount of material not represented in the material volume of the artifact itself. The rucksack for a common construction material may be many times in weight that of the material itself. For example, today the production of one unit in weight of aluminum (from virgin ore) requires 300 units in weight of a variety of materials (including mine tailings, fuel consumed etc.). Using measures such as the rucksack calls into question the responsibility of advocating light forms without a consideration of the “weight” of the processes of extraction, processing, manufacturing, transportation etc. In other words, the physical accounting of a unit of service is a better measure of materials use than a standard monetary accounting. More on this point in “Industrial Ecology of Buildings”, below. Substitution Like dematerialization, substitution has always been a dynamic that has prompted the evolution of architectural form. The substitution of steel for structural masonry materialized the modern architectural typology of the skyscraper. The substitution of concrete for stone, steel for timber, plywood for timber planking, thin wood veneers for lumber, gypsum and paper wall boards for plaster, and countless other examples illustrate the pervasiveness and persistence of the process of substitution. Also, similar to dematerialization, substitution is prompted by a complex assortment of factors of which a handful are almost always present; technical advances, resource pressures, supply or distribution interruptions, security concerns, and economics (Cornish 1987). Material substitutions are our concern here. Therefore, our working definition is the substantial replacement of one material or material system for another material or system such that the performance of the assembly is equaled or improved. While it is possible, and fairly common, for performance to suffer (as in the replacement of exterior stucco with Exterior Insulated Finishing Systems, EIFS) this kind of substitution is not considered legitimate as it decreases the performance of the material system.

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Chapter 2 Substitution plays a significant role in generating ideas and forms for contemporary architecture while providing alternatives for construction. Polycarbonate replacing glass (Caples and Jefferson 2005), pultrusions replacing aluminum (Strongwell 2005), aerated autoclave concrete (AAC) replacing regular concrete masonry units (Hebel 2005), carbon fiber and epoxy resin reinforcing bar replacing steel rebar in precast concrete (DelMonte 1981;Chen and Chung 1996), and many others incrementally change the material choices and construction practices that characterize contemporary architecture and facilitate the proposal of new forms. Substitution is rarely perfect - that is, the substitution of one material for another almost always entails a change of some kind in the performance situation (Reynolds 1999;Tilton 1983). For example, the seemingly one-for-one substitution of cold-rolled steel studs for wood studs seems, at first, seamless. The dimensions of the steel studs mimic those of the wood members, the fasteners are the same and the steel acts in precisely the same way to support the remainder of the assembly (usually gypsum board wall panels). However, because of its much higher thermal conductivity (50 W/m.K versus 0.25 W/m.K for pine) it is clear that thermal bridging between the inner and outer layers of an exterior wall increases greatly and detailing that minimizes this thermal flux should be prioritized. In addition, resource management issues should also be considered given the fact that US forests are some of the most closely managed silviculture anywhere in the world (since 1950, US forest cover has actually increased). One should question the benefit of replacing a renewable resource with a nonrenewable material. And while there are good points to be made regarding the increasingly anemic biological diversity of many of our national forests, the state of the renewable resource of wood is a positive attribute of the material. Substitution and dematerialization are often present simultaneously and sometimes working in concert to produce changes in the material content of buildings. However, neither force acts by default to improve the responsible use of materials in construction. The results of both of these forces may actually worsen the environmental impact, introduce new health hazards, and corrode the social fabric of communities. Yet, an awareness of these forces is the first step along the path of formulating a comprehensive strategy for ecological construction. Technology Transfer Finally, the third mode for change of the material content of contemporary buildings is the process of technology transfer. Just as substitution and dematerialization are readily explained in terms of materials and performance, the nature of technology transfer is similarly reducible. In the search for improved methods and materials to accomplish any particular task, importing techniques and materials from other disciplines and industries may improve the efficiency with which materials are used while improving (or not compromising) performance. One often hears the caution of “not reinventing the wheel” as one of the basic checks in any 53

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creative process. Transferring a technology that successfully satisfies one set of performance requirements in one industrial context into a different context defined by a different, but similar, set of issues may prove a useful strategy. Therefore, technology transfer can be defined as the substantial adoption, with likely modifications, of an existing technology or material for a purpose for which it was not originally intended. While this process may seem simple, achieving real success through technology transfer is another matter altogether. The application of one technology in a context of new performance requirements often gives rise to all kinds of unintended effects - both positive and negative. A simplistic application that involves little reengineering or redesigning is not often successful. The usual trajectory of such transfers involves the transposition of certain key technological elements into systems that already exist in the new context. In this sense, successful technology transfer is a rather messy enterprise, involving as it does the grafting of assemblies and systems onto, or in substitution of, unfamiliar constructs. The history of architecture - especially the history of the unbuilt - is full of examples of the desire to import complete systems to be used as architectural constructs. Bucky Fuller again presents us with a good example of this in the failure of his Dymaxion houses to achieve the promise of mass standardization and production so successful in the automobile industry. Given the fact that the profession is intensely attentive to the visual qualities and formal characteristics of constructed things, the irresistible temptation to procure entire assemblies and call it architecture has led many architects far from the fundamental mandate of the making of buildings and down disastrous paths of nonfunctioning curiosities. This is not true substitution as the use of materials with large rucksacks is not true dematerialization. It will be useful to keep in mind these three kinds of forces as we continue with the discussion of building lifetimes, construction ecologies and the introduction of materials and their properties. The World’s Largest Material Repository The accumulated mass of construction from all extinct and extant human civilizations constitutes the largest material repository that we currently possess. All of the buildings and dams and bridges and roads, museums and opera houses, tunnels and towers, mosques and cathedrals, supertall buildings and all other architectural and large-scale engineering constructs hold in their possession the vast resources of extracted material wealth of the past. When one considers the compounding effects of the long life of buildings (and infrastructure) and their large and material intensive bulk, it is not surprising that construction has resulted in sprawling landscapes of assembled mineral resources. The extraordinary efforts of previous 54

Chapter 2 societies to mine and process the mineral wealth of the world have left us with a huge bounty of material embodied within the structure, skin and internals of our buildings. Much of this material is essentially part of the permanent fabric of the building. Not much of the material bulk of buildings is recycled during its lifetime - finishes may be altered, walls moved, but the structure, foundation and much of the exterior skin and interior partitions will likely remain. The great proportion of this material is contained within the protective envelope of the building’s skin. Spared the fluctuations of temperature and the other deleterious forces of the weather, much of the bulk of these materials live a pampered, protected life within the stable interior environment of their building’s shell. This material store now forms our cities and highways, our civil infrastructure and residential architecture. A good deal of material flux - material flows devoted to new and existing buildings - contributes to the expansion of this semi-permanent material store. While it is true that nothing lasts forever, many of our cities have begun to solidify a central core, highly valued for its historical and economic values and considered immutable. The central arrondissements in Paris, parts of Midtown Manhattan, much of Beacon Hill in Boston, sections of London and many other mature cities - these districts have reached a semi-permanent state of completion in which major construction has essentially ceased and further material investment will be devoted to maintaining existing structures. If these city districts are essentially immutable carefully maintained and highly valued - then what can one say about the service lives of the buildings contained within them? Are they extended indefinitely into the future? Time Change This question and others bring forth the topic of building lifetimes. How do contemporary buildings live out their lives? How do different kinds of materials contribute to the trajectory of those lifetimes? In fact, the relationship between the changes that have been brought about by materials research for buildings and the way in which we use buildings prompts an essential question; what is the nature of the lifetime of a contemporary building? Building Lifetimes and Uncertainty This is not the same as asking about service and design lives for buildings, their components and systems. These topics are attended to by a growing assortment of regulating organizations and standards groups. These technical bodies concern themselves with the need to establish clear guidelines for product and material lifetimes under a variety of service conditions. This work, while useful and necessary, fulfills the needs of the insurance industries and manufacturing sector, while the designer and engineer are most mindful of the demands of service in light of warranty limitations and risk calculations. While these activities are essential, they are not at the core of the nature of building lifetimes. 55

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Chapter 2 The distinction between component and system service and design lives and building lives is based on the understanding that buildings serve out their lives in unpredictable ways, dependent on the vicissitudes of changing cultural values, aesthetic norms, patterns of use and economic forces. It is all very well to design to allow for a certain lifetime by designing to that level of durability, but the uncertainties of use often contribute unanticipated factors that fundamentally affect the lifetime of the building. Narrowly defined, the design life of a building is the expected cumulative service life that results from the properly maintained set of components and systems (Nireki 1996;Soronis 1996). The service life is the actual life of the component, assembly or building. The primary contention here is that the actual lives of buildings are significantly affected by forces that are outside of the control of the original designers or lifetime operators of the building (Douglas 2002;Brand 1994). Rather, control over the service lives of individual buildings is most often exercised by an array of forces independent of the building fabric itself and the original designers and engineers. These forces, generally the economic and social conditions within which the building is situated, unwittingly conspire to create situations in which the design lives of buildings do not generally correlate with their actual service lives (Soronis 1996;Nireki 1996). Therefore, actual building lifetimes are best represented as probabilities, Figure 2.12. These forces tend to introduce types of uncertainty not generally considered during the design or operation of most types of buildings. In addition, it can be shown that this uncertainty is more likely to affect a building of long life (+75 years) than one of short (0< x